Guide to Effective Monitoring of Aquatic and Riparian Resources United States

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United States
Department
of Agriculture
Forest Service
Rocky Mountain
Research Station
General Technical
Report RMRS-GTR-121
March 2004
Guide to Effective
Monitoring of Aquatic
and Riparian Resources
Abstract _______________________________________________
Kershner, Jeffrey L.; Archer, Eric K.; Coles-Ritchie, Marc; Cowley, Ervin R.; Henderson, Richard C.; Kratz, Kim;
Quimby, Charles M.; Turner, David L.; Ulmer, Linda C.; Vinson, Mark R. 2004. Guide to effective monitoring
of aquatic and riparian resources. Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. Fort Collins, CO: U.S. Department of
Agriculture, Rocky Mountain Research Station. 57 p.
This monitoring plan for aquatic and riparian resources was developed in response to monitoring needs
addressed in the Biological Opinions for bull trout (U.S. Department of the Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service 1998)
and steelhead (U.S. Department of Commerce, National Marine Fisheries Service). It provides a consistent
framework for implementing the effectiveness monitoring of aquatic and riparian resources within the range of the
Pacific Anadromous Fish Strategy (PACFISH) and the Inland Fish Strategy (INFISH). The primary objective is
to evaluate the effect of land management activities on aquatic and riparian communities at multiple scales and
to determine whether PACFISH/INFISH management practices are effective in maintaining or improving the
structure and function of riparian and aquatic conditions at both the landscape and watershed scales on Federal
lands throughout the upper Columbia River Basin.
A list of attributes thought to be important in defining aquatic and riparian habitat conditions and their
relationship with listed species were identified. The list of attributes was then translated into measurable criteria
and compiled to form sampling protocols for both stream channel parameters (Part II) and vegetation parameters
(Part III). These sampling methods were tested for variability, and the results are documented in two other
publications “Testing Common Stream Sampling Methods for Broad-Scale, Long-Term Monitoring.” (Archer and
others 2004) and “The Repeatability of Riparian Vegetation Sampling Methods: How Useful Are These
Techniques for Broad-Scale Monitoring?” (Coles-Ritchie and others, in preparation).
Keywords: effectiveness monitoring, stream habitat, riparian habitat, monitoring strategy, aquatic sampling,
vegetation sampling, watershed conditions, critical riparian area
The Authors ____________________
Jeffrey L. Kershner is a Washington Office Aquatic Ecologist with the
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Fish and Aquatic
Ecology Unit in Logan, UT. He completed a B.S. degree in 1976 at
Humbolt State University, Arcata, CA, in fisheries. He earned an M.S.
degree in natural resources from Humbolt State University in 1982, and a
Ph.D. degree in ecology from the University of California, Davis, in 1991.
Eric K. Archer joined the Forest Service as a Fisheries Biologist in
1999. He is the Supervisor of Field Operations and Data Analyst for the
Effectiveness Monitoring Project in Logan, UT. Eric received a B.S.
degree in fisheries management in 1996 from Utah State University,
Logan, and an M.S. degree in aquatic ecology in 1999 from Utah State
University, Logan.
Marc Coles-Ritchie is a Riparian Vegetation Ecologist for the U. S.
Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Fish and Aquatic Ecology
Unit in Logan, UT. He received a B.A. degree in comparative literature
from the University of Massachusetts and an M.S. degree in environmental studies from Bard College, which included research on the
harvest of tropical forest materials in Ecuador. Marc is completing a
Ph.D. degree in vegetation ecology at Utah State University, Logan.
Ervin R. Cowley is a Rangeland Management Specialist with the
Idaho State Office, Bureau of Land Management in Boise, ID. He
received a B.S. degree in range management from Utah State
University, Logan. Ervin began working for the BLM in 1965 and
presently is the Soil, Water, and Air and Riparian Management
Program Leader for the BLM in Idaho.
Richard C. Henderson earned his B.S. degree in fisheries biology
from Colorado State University in Fort Collins in 1992. In 1998 he
received his M.S. degree in fisheries biology from Utah State University,
Logan. He is currently a Fisheries Biologist for the U.S. Department of
Agriculture, Forest Service, Fish and Aquatic Ecology Unit in Logan, UT.
Kim Kratz is the Watershed Policy Coordinator for the Habitat Conservation Division, NOAA Fisheries. Kim received his Ph.D. degree in
population and community ecology from the University of California,
Santa Barbara.
Charles M. Quimby earned his B.S. degree from the University of
Arizona in 1970 with a major in rangeland management and a minor
in wildlife management. He earned his M.S. degree in watershed
management with emphasis on water quality and natural resource
recreation from the University of Arizona in 1976. He is currently
Rangeland Program Manager with the U.S. Department of Agriculture,
Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Region.
David L. Turner is a Rocky Mountain Research Station Mathematical
Statistician with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, in
Logan, UT. Prior to joining the Forest Service in 1989 he was a tenured
Associate Professor in the Applied Statistics Department at Utah State
University for 14 years. He completed a B.S. degree in statistics at
Colorado State University, Fort Collins. He earned M.S. and Ph.D.
degrees in statistics at Colorado State University, Fort Collins, in 1973
and 1975. He has been consulting with researchers on the design,
analysis, and salvage of studies since 1969. He speializes in the
analysis of messy data, applying modern statistical techniques to
Forest Service problems.
Linda C. Ulmer is an Aquatic Ecologist with the U.S. Department of
Agriculture, Forest Service. Linda received a B.S. degree in marine
biology from Farleigh Dickinson University and an M.S. degree in
marine biology from California State University, Long Beach. Linda
joined the Forest Service in 1989 after 11 years with California Department of Fish and Game. She is currently serving as the Columbia River
Basin Anadromous Coordinator in Portland, OR.
Mark R. Vinson is an Ecologist with the U.S. Department of the Interior,
Bureau of Land Management, in Logan, UT. He completed a B.S degree
in water resources at the University of Wisconsin, Stevens Point; an M.S
degree in biology at Idaho State University, Pocatello; and a Ph.D.
degree in watershed science at Utah State University, Logan.
Guide to Effective Monitoring of
Aquatic and Riparian Resources
Jeffrey L. Kershner
Eric K. Archer
Marc Coles-Ritchie
Ervin R. Cowley
Richard C. Henderson
Kim Kratz
Charles M. Quimby
David L. Turner
Linda C. Ulmer
Mark R. Vinson
Contents
Page
Executive Summary .................................................................................................................................... iii
Part I: A Plan to Monitor Aquatic and Riparian Resources (PACFISH/INFISH) and Biological
Opinions for Bull Trout , Salmon, and Steelhead ...................................................................... 1
Purpose and Need ....................................................................................................................................... 2
Introduction .................................................................................................................................................. 2
Goal and Objectives ..................................................................................................................................... 3
Goal ..................................................................................................................................................... 3
Objectives/Study Questions ................................................................................................................ 3
Guiding Principles and Assumptions ................................................................................................... 3
Approach ...................................................................................................................................................... 4
Objective 1 ................................................................................................................................................... 4
Study Design and Methods ................................................................................................................. 4
Analyses ..............................................................................................................................................8
Objective 2 ................................................................................................................................................... 8
Study Design and Methods ................................................................................................................. 8
Analyses ..............................................................................................................................................8
Annual Reporting ................................................................................................................................. 9
Objective 3 ................................................................................................................................................... 9
Study Design and Methods ............................................................................................................... 10
Analyses ............................................................................................................................................ 10
Data Summary, Decision Support, and Adaptive Management ........................................................ 10
Project Structure ........................................................................................................................................ 10
Data Quality Assurance and Quality Control .....................................................................................11
Timelines ........................................................................................................................................... 11
Conclusions ................................................................................................................................................ 11
Glossary ..................................................................................................................................................... 12
Appendix I-A ............................................................................................................................................... 14
Part II: Effectiveness Monitoring for Streams and Riparian Areas Within the Upper
Columbia River Basin: Sampling Protocol for Integrator Reaches Stream
Channel Parameters—2001 ........................................................................................................ 16
Introduction ................................................................................................................................................ 17
Sampling Order .......................................................................................................................................... 17
Establishing the Sample Reach ................................................................................................................. 17
Alkalinity and Conductivity ......................................................................................................................... 18
Conductivity ....................................................................................................................................... 18
Alkalinity ............................................................................................................................................ 18
Pools ...................................................................................................................................................... 18
Pool Length and Residual Pool Depth .............................................................................................. 18
Percent Surface Fines in Pool Tails .................................................................................................. 18
Streambed Particle Size Distribution .......................................................................................................... 19
Pebble Counts ................................................................................................................................... 19
i
Channel Cross-Sections ............................................................................................................................ 20
Entrenchment .................................................................................................................................... 20
Channel Transects ..................................................................................................................................... 21
General Transect Measurements ...................................................................................................... 21
Bank Angle (Normal and Undercut) .................................................................................................. 22
Bank Stability ..................................................................................................................................... 26
Streambank Stability Classification Key ..................................................................................................... 28
Large Woody Debris .................................................................................................................................. 31
Large Woody Debris Counts ............................................................................................................. 31
Reach Description Measurements ............................................................................................................. 31
Sinuosity and Valley Length .............................................................................................................. 31
Reach Gradient ................................................................................................................................. 31
Part III: Effectiveness Monitoring for Streams and Riparian Areas Within the Upper
Columbia River Basin: Sampling Protocol for Integrator Reaches Vegetation
Parameters ................................................................................................................................... 33
Introduction ................................................................................................................................................ 34
Sampling Order .......................................................................................................................................... 34
Riparian Vegetation Classifications............................................................................................................ 34
How to Use Vegetation Classifications .............................................................................................. 35
Establishing the Sample Area .................................................................................................................... 35
Greenline .................................................................................................................................................... 35
Vegetation Cross-Sections ......................................................................................................................... 41
Undescribed or “New” Communities: for Greenline or Vegetation Cross-Section Data Collection ............ 45
Effective Ground Cover .............................................................................................................................. 46
Woody Species Regeneration .................................................................................................................... 47
Plant Communities at Stream Transects.................................................................................................... 47
Collecting Specimens ................................................................................................................................. 49
References for Parts I, II, and III ................................................................................................................ 50
Appendix III-A (Equipment list) ................................................................................................................... 52
Appendix III-B Forms 5–8 .......................................................................................................................... 53
ii
Executive Summary
This plan was prepared at the request of the Regional
Foresters in Regions 1, 4, and 6 of the USDA Forest Service,
the State Directors of the USDI Bureau of Land Management
in Idaho and Oregon, the Director of the Pacific Region of the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the Director of the National
Marine Fisheries Service in the Northwest Regional Office.
Part I of this document provides a consistent framework for
implementing the effectiveness monitoring of aquatic and
riparian resources within the range of the Pacific Anadromous
Fish Strategy (PACFISH) and the Inland Fish Strategy (INFISH),
and is directed by the Biological Opinions for salmon, steelhead, and bull trout. Under the direction from these strategies,
the effectiveness monitoring plan is intended to evaluate the
effect of land management activities on aquatic and riparian
communities at multiple scales and will assess whether management direction, implemented through PACFISH/INFISH
and the Biological Opinions (PIBO), is effective in maintaining
or improving aquatic and riparian conditions at both the landscape and watershed scales on Federal lands.
Parts II and III of this document contain the protocols for
measuring specific aquatic and riparian attributes that describe
habitat conditions.
iii
Part I: A Plan to Monitor
Aquatic and Riparian
Resources (PACFISH/
INFISH) and Biological
Opinions for Bull Trout,
Salmon, and Steelhead
Jeffrey L. Kershner
Marc Coles-Ritchie
Ervin Cowley
Richard C. Henderson
Kim Kratz
Charles Quimby
David L. Turner
Linda C. Ulmer
Mark R. Vinson
Part I Acknowledgments
The authors acknowledge a number of people for their comments and review. Brett Roper, Gina
Lampman, Dave Hohler, and Bob Hamner of U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service; and Tim
Burton, Ron Wiley, and Karl Stein of the U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management
provided helpful feedback and comments on earlier drafts. Doug Young of U.S. Department of the Interior,
Fish and Wildlife Service contributed a number of ideas to the original plan. Ann Carlson, Jim Frazier, Amy
Lind, Joanne Fites, and Ken Roby of the Sierra Framework Aquatic Monitoring group helped to develop
many of the ideas related to the stressor-response model. Tony Olson (U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency) and Tom Edwards (U.S. Department of the Interior, Geological Survey) assisted with the overall
sample design. Tom Quigley, currently Director, Pacific Northwest Research Station, U.S. Department of
Agriculture, Forest Service, provided valuable insight into document consistency. We especially thank our
peer reviewers Peter Kiffney, Michael Pollock, and Phil Roni (U.S. Department of Commerce, National
Marine Fisheries Service); Rick Woodsmith and Steve Wondzell (U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest
Service); and Steve Ralph (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency/U.S. Department of the Interior,
National Park Service liaison) for their helpful suggestions and insights. Finally, we thank the Interagency
Implementation Team and the Regional executives for moving forward with this monitoring effort.
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
1
Purpose and Need _______________
This document provides a consistent framework for
implementing the effectiveness monitoring of aquatic
and riparian resources within the range of the Pacific
Anadromous Fish Strategy (PACFISH) and the Inland Fish Strategy (INFISH), and it is directed by the
Biological Opinions (PIBO) for salmon, steelheead,
and bull trout (fig. I-1). Under the direction from these
strategies, the effectiveness monitoring plan is intended to evaluate the effect of land management
activities on aquatic and riparian communities at
multiple scales, and the plan will assess whether
management direction, implemented through
PACFISH/INFISH and PIBO, is effective in maintaining or improving aquatic and riparian conditions at
both the landscape and watershed scales on Federal
lands. This document will serve as The Effectiveness
Monitoring Module—PIBO Monitoring Plan that will
guide the aquatic and riparian monitoring at the
landscape scale.
At the landscape scale, the effectiveness monitoring
plan is intended to answer the question, “Are key
biological and physical attributes, processes, and functions of upslope, riparian, and aquatic systems being
degraded, maintained, or restored within the geographic range of PIBO?” At the watershed scale, monitoring will be used to assess the condition of individual
watersheds and evaluate the extent to which management practices are effective in maintaining or restoring key ecological indicators.
The need for this monitoring plan is based on direction provided in the bull trout, salmon, and steelhead
Biological Opinions issued by the U.S. Department of
the Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) and
the U.S. Department of Commerce, National Marine
Fisheries Service (USNMFS). Direction in the Biological Opinions identified requirements for the U.S.
Department of Agriculture, Forest Service (USFS)
and the U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of
Land Management (USBLM) to develop a mechanism
for improved accountability and oversight for activities that may influence habitat for these “listed” fish
across their range. This plan was developed at the
request of the Regional Foresters of Regions 1, 4, and
6 of the Forest Service, the State Directors of the U.S.
Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management in Idaho and Oregon, the Director of the Pacific
Region of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the
Director of the National Marine Fisheries Service in
the Northwest Regional Office. Implementation of
this plan began in 1998, and the concepts and ideas
were tested and evaluated though 2002. Full implementation of this plan began in FY 2003.
This plan is not intended to replace or supercede all
effectiveness monitoring that currently exists within
the PIBO area. It provides a framework to answer
questions related to aquatic and riparian systems at
multiple scales and provides some needed consistency in approach and analysis (fig. I-2). Effectiveness monitoring that addresses specific questions
related to Forest and District planning and/or activity monitoring should continue. Forest or District
offices of the USFS and USBLM may want to reexamine, and potentially modify, their efforts where
there is overlap with the broad-scale effort in order to
improve efficiency.
Introduction ____________________
Figure I-1—Map of PACFISH/INFISH study area
(enclosed in bold line).
2
The decline of native fish species in Western North
America has prompted new interest in monitoring the
relationships between land management activities and
aquatic and riparian ecosystems. The condition of the
aquatic and riparian habitats in any place and at any
scale is the integrated product of the ecosystem processes, function, and structure. Analysis of watershed
conditions requires considering the degree to which key
processes that create and maintain habitat are intact
and functional through time. The basic components of
aquatic ecosystems that need to be evaluated include
basin geomorphology, hydrologic function, upland and
riparian conditions, in-stream habitat conditions, water quality, and biological integrity (Karr and Chu
1997; Naiman and others 1992). Ecologically healthy
watersheds have lateral, longitudinal, and vertical connections between system components, and they exhibit
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
Scale - PIBO landscape
Example: Are range - wide conditions
improving?
Who: PIBO monitoring team
Scale - BLM District, National Forest
Example: Are district/forest plan standards
and guidelines effective at meeting
PACFISH RMOs?
Who: Local unit, level 1 teams
Scale - district, activity
Example: Are riparian/aquatic conditions
in a specific allotment improving?
Who: District, local personnel
Figure I-2—Responsibilities of organizational units
within BLM/Forest Service for effectiveness
monitoring.
a range of spatial and temporal connectivity. Consequently, watersheds exist in a variety of states and
exhibit considerable variation (Ebersole and others
1997; Reeves and others 1995). Successful monitoring
of these relationships must be sensitive to the dynamic
nature of ecosystem processes across spatial and temporal scales.
While there has been considerable research documenting the effects of various land use practices on
watershed function, most of these efforts have been
attempted at relatively small spatial and temporal
scales. There are few existing efforts to evaluate anthropogenic effects on aquatic resources at larger
scales (Larsen and others 2001; Whittier and Paulsen
1992). Currently, the Environmental and Assessment
Program (EMAP, USEPA) and the North American
Water Quality Assessment Program (NAWQA, USGS)
are the primary large-scale monitoring programs being implemented in the United States, but the purpose
and goals of these efforts are somewhat different than
the plan outlined here. Multiscalar monitoring plans
specifically focused on relationships between anthropogenic activities and watershed function are in development by land management agencies but are not yet
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
fully operational (for example, the Northwest Forest
Plan, Ringold and others 1999, and the Sierra Province Assessment and Monitoring Effort). This plan has
tried to incorporate many of the ideas and concepts
that have been developed as part of these other efforts.
There is considerable overlap in the goals and objectives of these monitoring efforts, and we have
attempted to use this existing foundation wherever
possible and expand these concepts to fit the situation
in the PIBO area.
Reviews of past monitoring efforts have indicated
that a number of key steps must be present in any plan
for it to be successful (Conquest and others 1994;
MacDonald and others 1991; Noon and others 1997).
These steps include, but are not limited to, clear goals
and objectives, a conceptual model linking the stressors to consequences, consistent and reliable measurement protocols, a study design that has the potential
to detect differences, and clear linkage between monitoring results and management decisions. We believe
that a monitoring plan framework developed by Noon
and others (1997) is a logical framework, and we have
incorporated many of the ideas that were developed by
them in the following plan.
Goal and Objectives _____________
Goal
Our Goal is to design a monitoring plan within the
PIBO area with the capability to determine whether
PACFISH/INFISH management practices are effective in maintaining or restoring the structure and
function of riparian and aquatic systems.
Objectives/Study Questions
1. Determine whether a suite of biological and physical attributes, processes, and functions of upland,
riparian, and aquatic systems are being degraded,
maintained, or restored across the PIBO landscape.
2. Determine the direction and rate of change in
riparian and aquatic habitats over time as a function
of management practices.
3. Determine if specific Designated Management
Area (DMA) practices related to livestock grazing are
maintaining or restoring riparian vegetation structure and function.
Guiding Principles and Assumptions
1. Develop an effectiveness monitoring plan that is
cost effective and practical.
2. Develop an effectiveness monitoring framework
that incorporates measurable, repeatable methods
that will be useful in answering monitoring questions
on Federal lands at different scales.
3
3. The implementation of CRA practices will mitigate
the grazing-related effects of human-caused stressors.
Approach ______________________
The condition of the aquatic and riparian ecosystem
is the integrated product of ecosystem processes, rates,
and attributes. The central premise of this approach is
that a variety of stressors exert significant influence
on the structure and function of aquatic and riparian
ecosystems and that the addition of anthropogenic
stressors may change the timing, magnitude, and
duration of ecosystem response. The combined result
is manifested in the current condition of watersheds
throughout the PIBO area.
This stressor-response model forms the foundation
for the effectiveness monitoring plan. This model is one
part of a broader framework developed by Noon and
others (1997) that describes the key components of a
monitoring plan. An exhaustive list of potential stressors was developed as part of the Sierra-Nevada Ecosystem Aquatic Monitoring effort and used as a starting
point to identify stressors that may influence riparian
and aquatic habitats in the PIBO area (table I-1).
Conceptual models linking stressors to a set of
biophysical consequences in aquatic and riparian systems were developed as part of the Sierra Province
Assessment and Monitoring effort and the Northwest
Forest Plan. We reviewed these models and developed
a composite model that best fits the situation in the
PIBO area (fig. I-3). At the bioregional scale, geology,
climate, and topography influence broad-scale vegetation development, the type, frequency, and magnitude
of disturbances, and other ecosystem processes such
as hydrologic and nutrient cycling, carbon flux and
storage, primary productivity, site productivity, and
trophic dynamics. These processes directly influence
processes and functions occurring at the watershed
scale. Lines connecting these components are bidirectional, indicating that influences may occur between
processes and scales. The consequences of stressors on
watershed processes in uplands, riparian areas, and
streams are integrated and ultimately influence components of aquatic biodiversity.
The list of the biophysical consequences was used to
develop potential indicators that could be used to
measure the response of aquatic and riparian communities to the anthropogenic stresses (appendix I-A).
We used a set of rating criteria developed by the Sierra
Province Aquatic and Riparian Monitoring Plan (in
preparation) to evaluate the feasibility and usefulness of each indicator (table I-2). The final indicators
reflect stressors/indicators associated with uplands,
riparian-flood-plain systems, and in-channel subsystems (table I-3). Once this set of indicators was
selected, we developed a full description for each
4
indicator including the biological and physical importance, the relationship of the indicator to management, field methods, and a description of how data
have been analyzed and interpreted in past studies
(appendix I-A). These descriptions were used to guide
the study design and sampling efforts.
Objective 1 _____________________
Study question: Are priority biological and physical
attributes, processes, and functions of riparian and
aquatic systems degraded, maintained, restored in
the PIBO area? Additional questions will also be
tested.
Study Design and Methods
We propose an “extensive” approach to monitoring
by subsampling a fixed percentage of the 6th hydrologic unit code (HUC) watersheds within the PIBO
area on a yearly basis. We will stratify the sample area
by using geology, watershed size, elevation, precipitation, and vegetation as our primary stratification
criteria, and “managed” and “reference” as secondary
Table I-1—Aquatic and riparian ecosystem stressors in the
PIBO area. Stressors are divided into two
categories relative to their relationship to human
activities and scale.
Stressors that are a direct result of human activities
1. Impermeable ground surfaces—urbanization,
campgrounds, pavement, and so forth
2. Water pollution—eutrophication, herbicides, toxic spills,
and so forth
3. Direct human land/resource use—recreation, hunting,
fishing, hiking, and so forth
4. Roads and log landings in upland and riparian areas,
especially stream crossings, culverts, and so forth
5. Dams and water diversions, and so forth
6. Air pollution
7. Mining effects
8. Vegetation management—timber harvest, prescribed fire,
fire suppression, wildlife habitat conversion, and so forth
9. Livestock grazing
10. Introduced (exotic) species
Large-scale environmental stressors that can be
influenced spatially and temporally by human activities
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Climate change
Drought
Flood
Mass earth movement
Wildfire
Insects/pathogens
Invasive species
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
Watershed Processes and Functions
Bioregional conditions
Geology,
climate,
topography
Processes
Speciation, nutrient flow, species
interactions, disturbance, sedimentation
Ecosystem process
Upslope
Riparian/floodplain
Stream
Stressors
Human influenced
Consequences
General process
Key process
Vegetation
growth, mortality,
succession
Wood production,
transport
Fire, insects,
pathogens
Human caused
Forest management,
recreation, grazing
Fragmentation, debris
recruitment, nutrient
cycling, altered species composition
Soil cycle
Sediment production,
transport, erosion,
nutrient cycle, mass
wasting, debris flows
Mass wasting,
debris flows, surface
erosion
Forest management,
roads, mining,
grazing, recreation
development
Nutrient cycling, soil
moisture, formation
rates, sediment regime
Hydrologic
cycle
Water storage,
yield, precipitation
Precipitation,
floods, drought
Forest management,
mining, grazing, roads
Changes in runoff timing
magnitude, water storage, routing
Vegetation growth,
mortality, succession
Wood production,
transport, community
structure, regeneration
Fire, insects,
pathogens,
herbivory
Forest management,
recreation, grazing
Changes in species composition,
direct habitat loss, change
in riparian microclimate,
change in nutrient
cycle, change in woody
debris recruitment
Soil cycle
Sediment production,
transport, erosion,
nutrient cycling,
Mass wasting,
debris flows,
erosion, flooding
Forest management,
mining, recreation,
roads
Changes in sediment regime,
soil moisture
Hydrologic cycle
Water storage, yield
Flooding, drought
Forest management,
roads, recreation,
grazing, mining,
diversion, impoundment
Change in water temperature,
hydrologic regime, runoff
timing and magnitude,
toxins
Energy exchange
Heat delivery
Insulation, shading
Forest management,
grazing
Changes in microclimate, water
temperature
Chemical/nutrient
turnover
Chemical/nutrient
delivery
Deposition, erosion,
transport, storage
Forest management
Changes in nutrient production,
introduction of toxins
Hydrologic cycle
Water timing, quantity,
hyporheic exchange
Flooding, drought
Diversion, impoundment
Changes in water quality, temperature,
debris transport, habitat loss
Energy exchange
Heat delivery
Insulation, shading
Forest management
Changes in water temperature
Channel structure
Sediment, wood delivery,
habitat formation
Scour, deposition,
debris transport, channel
migration
Dredging, mining, grazing, Habitat loss, change in stream channel
forest management,
morphology, sediment regime
recreation
Chemical/nutrient
turnover
Delivery of chemicals/
nutrients
CPOM/FPOM input,
erosion, toxins
Forest management,
grazing, recreation,
waste disposal, mining
Changes in nutrient cycle, water
quality
Aquatic communities
Figure I-3—Conceptual model of processes and stressors that influence processes, functions, and potential
consequences at the watershed scale.
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
5
Table I-2—Review criteria used in the initial screening of indicators for the PIBO effectiveness monitoring
plan. Criteria were evaluated at four spatial scales: site, watershed, basin, and PIBO area.
1. What is the availability of existing data? - none, low, moderate, high.
2. How relevant is the indicator to our original goals, objectives, and questions? - none, low, moderate,
high, indirect.
3. Can the results be consistently interpreted within known reference conditions or contexts? - no, yes.
4. Is change detectable at scale of interest? - no, yes.
5. How sensitive is the indicator to stressors? - low, moderate, high.
6. How confident are we that the indicator represents a function or process of interest? - none, low,
moderate, high.
7. Is there a direct measure of the stressor available? - no, yes.
8. Are there existing methods available to measure the indicator? - no, yes.
9. Can the indicator be applied at multiple spatial scales? no, yes (which scales?)
10. Are the metrics associated with the indicator repeatable (and doable)? - no, yes.
11. What is the relative cost? - low, moderate, high
Table I-3—Final indicator selection summary showing relationship to stressors, a composite usability ranking, and an indication
of how the data will be gathered.
Usability
Data collectionb
Land use history and current management (upland and riparian)
Equivalent road acres, harvest history
D
Road density—hydrologically connected
D
Number of culverts and stream crossings
D
Culvert failure rate
D
Mining history/extent
D
Fire frequency
D
Roads: landslide frequency, size, location
D
Livestock management history
D
High
High
High
High
Med
Med/high
Med
med
Allc
Allc
Office, fieldc
Office, field
Office, field
Office, field
c
Office, field
Office, fieldc
Riparian/floodplain habitat
Fragmentation of riparian vegetation— high contrast
Seral stage / structural complexity of riparian
Flood-plain interactions/connectivity
Effective ground cover
I
I
I
D
High
High
Med/high
Med
Rm, field
Rm, field
Field
c
Field
I
I
I
I
I
I
Med/high
Med
High
High
High
High
Field
Fieldc
Fieldc
Fieldc
Fieldc
Field, rmc
Indicator
Direct/indirecta
In-channel/community integrity
Invertebrate community structure
Water quality - direct measures
Water temperature - direct measures
Distribution of large woody debris
Cross section mapping
Width-to-depth ratio, frequency of large pools,
longitudinal profiles, residual pool depth,
bank angles, percent undercut bank, substrate composition,
bank stability
c
a
Direct (D) or indirect (I) measure of a stressor.
Remote sensing (rm) = aerial photos, maps, infrared, and satellite imagery; office = information on file in Forest offices or that can be
gathered through library research; field = requires field data collection; all = all three of these techniques are used.
c
Data are quantitative, measured, and not estimated.
b
6
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
strata. We will test whether our stratification criteria
contribute significant value to our analysis using analysis of covariance. If stratification criteria are not meaningful, we will combine samples where appropriate.
We will develop 177 blocks of 20 contiguous watersheds throughout the PACFISH/INFISH area. Each
year we will randomly choose 20 percent of the blocks
and then subsample seven of the watersheds within
each block. We will repeat this process over a 5-year
period until we have sampled approximately one-half
of the potential watersheds that have perennial streams
and greater than 50 percent Federal ownership above
the sample reach. We will then resample the same
watersheds over subsequent 5-year periods. This design is represented as a rotating panel that is serially
augmented and alternates over a given period
(Urquhart and others 1998). Initially, we will randomly select the subsample of reference and managed
watersheds within the group. Our goal will be to select
an even number of “reference” and “managed” watersheds for sampling. Because the number of “reference”
watersheds is generally low, we will sample as many
as possible within the group, up to half of the total
number of watersheds.
We will work with individual field units to verify the
status and condition of each watershed. Watersheds
that do not meet sampling criteria will be dropped
from sampling and alternates chosen. For example,
watersheds that appear to fit sampling criteria on the
map, but have intermittent flow during the sampling
season, will be dropped in favor of a watershed having
perennial stream flow. This will allow us to maximize
crew and sampling efficiency within given areas while
meeting our assumption of randomness.
The sample watersheds will be selected from the
current list of watersheds developed during consultation with both the USNMFS and the USFWS to track
implementation monitoring within the sample watersheds during year 1. In subsequent years, the random
sample of effectiveness monitoring watersheds will
trigger the selection of implementation monitoring in
the same watersheds. This will allow us to determine
whether the key management practices have been
fully implemented. At this time, only watersheds having greater than 50 percent Federal land ownership
will be considered for sampling to reduce the variability associated with mixed-ownership management.
Sample watersheds will be a priori divided into two
analysis categories—reference and managed—that
exhibit a range of land management activities. We will
establish category ownership by developing a set of
screening criteria using management activities and
the percentage of those activities that currently exist
in the watershed. In addition, we will also use information from other water quality assessments and the
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
Inland West Strategy (where data are available) to
further define management categories. If we determine that reference watersheds are unavailable
throughout a basin, we will gather information from
field units on the status and distribution of riparian
and aquatic habitats that have been minimally influenced by land management activities and convene
expert panels to evaluate these data and establish
“reference” conditions for these areas (fig. I-4).
We will use the “stream” as our sampling unit within
the watershed, and stream reaches will be our sample
locations. We will potentially use two reach types in
the survey:
1. Response reaches, which have less than a 2
percent gradient and respond to sediment and wood
input by adjusting channel form.
2. Transition reach, which have a 2 to 3 percent
gradient, are generally the transition between response reaches and transport reaches, and show little
visible effect in channel form from sediment and debris inputs.
Initial reach determinations will be made from U.S.
Geological Information System (GIS) maps available
for each watershed. We will select a minimum of one
reach within each watershed. Potential integrator
reaches that are influenced by beaver activity will be
excluded from sampling. This reach will normally be
Preliminary Reference Site Assessment
Reference sites available
No reference sites
Minimal disturbance
Ecological modeling
Where “reference” sites
exist, establish
expectations
Use (1) neighboring site
classes, (2) expert consensus,
or (3) composite of “best”
ecological information
Central tendency,
shape of distribution
Hypothetical expectations,
shape of distribution, central
tendency
Aquatic/riparian
integrity rating
Aquatic/riparian
integrity rating
Figure I-4—Approach to establishing reference
conditions (modified from Barbour and others 1995).
7
the most downstream reach in the watershed and
should represent a response reach wherever possible.
This “integrator” reach should be a minimum of 20
times the bankfull width, but never less than 80 m. An
integrator reach will never have a gradient greater
than 3 percent. In general, these reach types represent
pool-riffle channels that should have the greatest
sensitivity to increases in sediment supply and peak
flows (Montgomery and MacDonald 2002). In composite watersheds where there are multiple small streams
entering a large stream (greater than 4th order) we will
randomly select one stream and sample the most
downstream reach. At each watershed we will collect
information on management history indicators,
in-channel and water quality indicators, and riparian
community indicators.
Analyses
See objective 2.
Objective 2 _____________________
Study question: What is the direction and rate of
change in aquatic and riparian habitats over time?
Study Design and Methods
In addition to our annual random sampling, we will
select a fixed number of watersheds from each strata
to track over time. This will allow us to determine the
rate and direction of change in managed and reference
watersheds, which will allow us to better estimate the
“year” effect and to project how long it will take for the
expected changes from management to occur. These
“sentinel” sites will be sampled yearly. We anticipate
that there will be 50 of these watersheds in the annual
sample, divided equally between the two categories.
We will use the same sample reaches and transects for
our field measurements. Sample reaches and transects
will have permanent survey monuments and be
geospatially located to facilitate finding these sites
through time.
Once the final indicators were selected (table I-3),
we developed a description of all methods for both land
use history variables and habitat variables. A complete description of the methods for assessing land use
history is in development, while a description of the
methods used to assess stream and aquatic habitat is
found in Part II, and the methods for assessing riparian communities are found in Part III.
A quality control plan was developed to test the
variability of our methods, the variability between
crews, and seasonal variability (Archer and others, in
press; Coles-Ritchie and others, in preparation).
8
Analyses
We will evaluate questions 1 and 2 using a variety of
analyses. Our initial design is an incomplete randomized block analysis of variance where:
• Group represents potential strata (for example,
geology, precipitation, ecoregion).
• Years are the incomplete blocks; in other words, a
random subset of sites (selected without replacement) are visited each year.
• Each site will eventually be visited at 5-year (or
more) intervals, depending on funding.
• Sentinel sites will be visited every year but by
different crews (in other words, crews change
virtually every year).
• The ANOVA breakdown would be as follows:
Source
Group
Site (group)
Year
Year x group
Year x site (group)
Crew (year)
Crew (year) x site (group)
Residual
This analysis will be used to determine if watershed
condition, as expressed by the indicators, is changing
over time. Results of these analyses will be used to
display the trajectories of watershed condition across
the PIBO landscape. In addition, we will evaluate the
distribution of watershed condition indicators among
the selected reference and managed watersheds by
evaluating the frequency distribution of condition of
watersheds across the whole PACFISH/INFISH region. Patterns of ecological functions are spatially and
temporally dynamic. Hence, watershed condition will
be defined by comparing individual indicators or static
estimates of watershed condition with the natural
range of watershed function and integrity. How rapidly the frequency distribution changes will depend on
a variety of factors, including current conditions, natural disturbances, intensity of management activity,
and degree of degradation from which a watershed is
recovering. Under natural conditions, watersheds
across the landscape ranged from diverse, productive
biotic communities, to relatively simple, unproductive
systems (Overton and others 1995; Reeves and others
1995). If the aquatic conservation strategy of PACFISH/
INFISH is effective, it should create a landscape of
managed watersheds that trends toward improved
functioning over time (fig. I-5).
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
Frequency
Past
Time
Current
t0
t1
t2
Appropriate
trajectories
Inappropriate
trajectories
Future
value at
t2
Condition index
Figure I-5—Hypothetical change in frequency distribution
moving from historic, to current, to expected change.
Target distribution does not equal historic distribution
(adapted from Noon and others 1997).
Exploratory analyses will assess the relationships of
the variables used in our comparative analyses. This
has two purposes: first, we can evaluate the contribution of the indicators to explain pattern and process;
and second, it should allow us to validate the value of
the stratifications that we a priori identified. These
types of analyses may include cluster analysis, discriminant functions analysis, ordination, and regression.
Annual Reporting
Data from sentinel sites will be used in combination
with our previous data set to project trends and rates
of change in aquatic and riparian community characteristics across the PIBO landscape. These data will be
used to forecast the outcomes of management changes
over time, and we could potentially use this information to project watershed recovery rates within similar
geographic areas. For example, long-term data from
sentinel sites in some strata may indicate that channel
response to changes in management may be slow due
to the influence of the geology or climate in an area. By
understanding this relationship, managers could potentially use this information to promote recovery by
making more substantive changes in management
practices or by identifying restoration activities that
accelerate recovery.
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
Data will be annually summarized for all sample
watersheds into an aggregate rating for each sample
strata. Comparative analyses will be summarized by
stratum to determine differences in watershed condition between the managed and reference watersheds.
Initially, strata where frequency distributions for
variables are similar and where less than 25 percent
of the variables are significantly different between
managed and reference watersheds will be considered
“maintained or restored.” Watersheds where differences are apparent in the shapes of the distributions
and/or more than 25 percent of the variables are
significantly different between managed and reference sites will be subject to further analyses. This
“further analysis” categorization triggers an examination of the individual management watersheds within
the strata to determine causation. These watersheds
will be subject to review by District Managers/Forest
Supervisors and interagency review teams. Local
managers can review the current conditions of the
watershed, determine whether current management
practices are being implemented correctly, and evaluate whether changes are needed.
Objective 3 _____________________
Study question: Are site-specific DMA practices
being implemented, and are they effective in maintaining or restoring riparian habitats (grazing as an
example)?
DMA practices are designed to protect aquatic and
riparian habitats from land use effects. A basic assumption underlying the DMA concept is that land use
activities can be mitigated by implementing these
practices. Best Management Practices (BMP) are generally included as DMA practices but are specifically
designed to protect water quality. DMA monitoring is
an evaluation of whether or not the implementation of
the practices over time is actually moving specific
resource conditions toward desired conditions (related
to the PACFISH Riparian Management Objectives).
DMA indicators are selected to be directly and rapidly responsive to the land use, although in practice
this may be difficult to achieve. For example, riparian
hardwood recruitment and retention is responsive to
grazing (both livestock and big game) and presumably
to the implementation objective for residual stubble
height. While the indicator is responsive to grazing
impacts, it may also be affected by ground-water
availability (which in turn can be affected by roads or
logging). However, if the site objectives are related to
the need to increase woody vegetation, and grazing
impacts are a concern, the use of the riparian hardwood recruitment/retention indicator may be the best
choice available.
9
outlet) will be sampled using a similar procedure.
Grazing response reaches should be a minimum of 110
m (Winward 2000). If a response reach is unavailable
within the first pasture, then we will sample a transition reach within the same pasture. Only riparian
community and streambank indicators will be measured in the grazing reach.
Interagency
Regional
Executives
Analyses
Interagency
Implementation
Team
Technical
Advisory
Group
Effectiveness
Monitoring
Technical Team
Data Summary, Decision Support, and
Adaptive Management
Field offices,
District,
Supervisor’s Office,
Level 1 teams
Field Implementation Team
Figure I-6—Organizational structure of PIBO
effectiveness monitoring team.
Study Design and Methods
To date, only the monitoring protocol for grazing is
specifically developed. Each pasture that contains a
riparian area will have one or more key areas where
Implementation Monitoring is to occur. These key
areas will be monitored to determine if the end-ofseason grazing implementation standard has been
achieved.
The sampling framework for grazing practice effectiveness monitoring will be the same as the strategy
outlined for question 1. Grazing effectiveness monitoring will be conducted within the same watersheds
selected to answer objective 1 (where livestock grazing
is present). In watersheds that are grazed, we will
sample DMAs within one pasture containing significant amounts of riparian vegetation-dominated habitat. We will exclude small special management pastures—such as on-off allotments, holding pastures,
cow camps, pastures containing only forested riparian
areas with little or no grass-dominated vegetation,
and riparian exclosures—and place them in a separate
category. Sample reaches will be chosen by field unit
personnel. If more than one DMA is present, we will
randomly choose one sample site. Composite watersheds
(watersheds not having a clearly defined topographic
10
The analyses to answer this question are similar to
the comparative analyses outline under objectives 1
and 2. In addition, analysis of covariance may be
attempted to look at the influence of the stubble height
Key Management Practices (KMP) on meeting effectiveness monitoring objectives.
Because DMA monitoring is designed to provide
short-term feedback on the effectiveness of specific
management practices, this information must be rapidly summarized and analyzed to provide feedback to
managers. Data will be summarized by watershed and
made available to local field personnel on an annual
basis. In addition, summaries and analyses of riparian
community indicators by strata will be included so
that managers can evaluate the results of their management against similar prescriptions in proximity to
their sites. This should give managers information to
make changes, if necessary, to the residual stubble
height standards in their allotments. Data will also be
used in the analyses and reporting described in question 1.
Project Structure ________________
The effectiveness monitoring plan provides the conceptual framework, sample design, core indicators,
and analysis to evaluate riparian and in-channel conditions and assess watershed conditions across the
PACFISH/INFISH area. Regional executives from the
BLM, NMFS, FWS, and Forest Service oversee the
monitoring efforts related to PACFISH/INFISH and
the Biological Opinions. Their direct representatives
are the Interagency Implementation Team. The Effectiveness Monitoring Technical Team is an interagency
team responsible for the development of the effectiveness monitoring plan and provides guidance to the
Field Implementation Team. Technical oversight and
peer review are conducted by the Technical Advisory
Group, which is composed of scientists and managers
from agencies and academia. The Effectiveness Monitoring Field Implementation Team develops sampling
protocols, analyzes and interprets data, and reports
findings to agency managers. This team will report
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
directly to the Effectiveness Monitoring Technical
Team. We propose a centralized structure to ensure all
elements of data quality control and quality assurance
are maintained. Local field units will interact with the
Effectiveness Monitoring Field Teams to validate assumptions, define indicator relevance and importance,
and coordinate logistical needs for data collection. The
Effectiveness Monitoring Field Team will provide assistance to local field units when requested and provide each field unit with a copy of field and office
protocols, sampling locations and maps, technical data
and analysis, and an annual report of monitoring
activities.
Effectiveness Monitoring Field Team responsibilities are:
• Develop and implement the effectiveness monitoring plan.
• Develop and apply a sampling scheme to select
sampled watersheds.
• Train field implementation teams, and coordinate data acquisition efforts.
• Maintain a corporate data structure for acquired
information.
• Compile and analyze data to establish status and
trend information for resource conditions within
the PACFISH/INFISH area.
• Report monitoring results annually to agency
executives.
• Make recommendations to adapt the effectiveness
monitoring program to include new or refined
indicators developed through statistical analyses and other research results as they become
available.
• Advise managers on observed effectiveness of key
management practices.
• Coordinate logistics for annual data collection
with administrative units.
• Compile, verify, and summarize indicator data for
all watersheds sampled in the region.
• Develop and maintain a quality control program
for monitoring data.
• Work with the Technical Advisory Team and the
Effectiveness Monitoring Technical Team to
modify sampling methods and protocols where
needed.
Local field-unit staff will interact with the teams to
refine local indicators, give relative weighting to indicators in assessments, contribute technical support to
data acquisition and interpretation, and work with
the technical team to develop predictive models.
Because watershed condition assessments will be
subject to local interpretation, appropriate documentation must accompany each assessment to describe
how core indicators are applied and which additional
indicators, if any, are integrated into watershed condition assessments. Proper documentation and oversight
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
of this process will be critical to ensure that the
database will have value when aggregated at the
regional scales.
Data Quality Assurance and Quality
Control
Quality assurance and quality control measures for
collecting data and assessing watershed condition are
built into the organizational and implementation
structure for the effectiveness monitoring plan (Archer
and others, in press; Coles-Ritchie and others, in
preparation). Quality-control measures will include:
(1) developing and using standardized protocols for
data collection; (2) testing the ability of crews to obtain
consistent results with field protocols; (3) documenting data sources and the assumptions used to develop
indicator reference conditions, weights, and relations
used in the analysis; and (4) annual review of protocols, protocol testing, and project design.
Results of quality control testing have been provided
to outside peer reviewers for comment and review.
Objectives of outside review are to validate the information and assumptions used in the process, to gain
internal team understanding and support of the assessment results and the process used, and to provide
feedback on information and research gaps, with suggestions for future work.
Timelines
The PIBO effectiveness monitoring project underwent pilot testing for 3 years. In 2001 and 2002 the
project sampled at 50 percent of projected full implementation (table I-4). The first year of full implementation is projected was 2003. At full implementation
250 “extensive” watersheds and 50 “sentinel” watersheds will be sampled annually. Approximately 50
percent of the watersheds meeting the Federal ownership criteria will be sampled over a 5-year sampling
period. At year 6, a new sampling cycle will begin, and
the same watersheds will be sampled over the next
5-year cycle. During a typical forest planning cycle
(15 years) approximately 50 percent of the watersheds
in the PIBO will be sampled two to four times.
Conclusions ____________________
One of the largest problems with monitoring plans of
this type is the truncation of monitoring before enough
data are gathered for interpretation (Reid 2001). This
project is designed to be long term, and many of the
changes, as a result of changes in management, will
most likely not occur during a short period (1 to 5
years). Some of these changes will be dependent on the
recurrence intervals of major flood events (greater
than 25 years), fire frequencies, and forest succession.
11
Table I-4—Projected sampling cycle for sentinel and extensive monitoring watersheds in the
PIBO area.
Watershed
2001
Sentinel
Group 1
Group 2
Group 3
Group 4
Group 5
25
125
a
2002
2003
2004
25
50
50
2006
2007
50
50
250a
50
125
250
250
250
250
An additional suite of 125 watersheds will be selected out of this group.
Long-term monitoring will be the only way that we will
be able to detect whether changes in past management
are indeed influencing watershed conditions.
This plan should be viewed as a “living” document
and should evolve as new information becomes available. While we envision the basic sampling scheme to
remain intact, it may be necessary to modify our
design or sampling to accommodate new information.
For example, one question that arose during the pilot
study was, “Are conditions at the integrator reach
reflective of conditions in the watershed as a whole?”
This has been addressed by other efforts in a variety of
ways. In the Aquatic Riparian Effectiveness Monitoring Plan (AREMP, in preparation), multiple reaches
are selected within a watershed to develop a watershed characterization. In the EMAP program
(Kaufmann and others 1999) random reaches are
selected that “represent” conditions for a particular
watershed. We will subsample a number of our “intensive” watersheds to determine whether the conditions
at the integrator sites reflect conditions within the
watershed. In addition, we will sample multiple response reaches and transport reaches throughout the
watershed and use these data to compute the variability associated with measured variables. We will statistically determine if the error associated with increased
sample sizes appears to decrease at some threshold. If
we can detect a threshold, then we will adjust our
sample strategy in the sentinel watersheds. If we are
unable to detect significant differences between integrator reaches and watershed reach summaries, then
we will discontinue whole watershed sampling.
Finally, the intent of this plan is to provide information that will help managers to understand whether
actions that have been implemented on the ground are
maintaining or restoring stream habitat. This plan
will only succeed if the results from this monitoring
are transmitted in a timely manner and result in
positive change.
12
2005
Glossary _______________________
Aquatic community – an association of interacting
assemblages in a given water body, the biotic component of an ecosystem.
Biogeographic regions – any geographical region characterized by a distinctive flora and/or fauna.
Biological integrity – functionally defined as the condition of an aquatic community inhabiting unimpaired
water bodies of a specified habitat as measured by an
evaluation of multiple attributes of the aquatic biota.
Three critical components of biological integrity are
that the biota is (1) the product of the evolutionary
process for that locality or site, (2) inclusive of a broad
range of biological and ecological characteristics such
as taxonomic richness and composition, atrophic structure, and (3) is found in the study biogeographic
region.
Biological monitoring or biomonitoring – the use of a
biological entity as a detector and its response as a
measure to determine environmental conditions. Toxicity tests and ambient biological surveys are common
biomonitoring methods.
Community – any portion of a biological community.
The community component may pertain to the taxonomic group (fish, invertebrates, algae plants), the
taxonomic category (phylum, order, family, genus,
species, stock), the feeding strategy (herbivore, omnivore, predator), or the organizational level (individual,
population, assemblage) of a biological entity within
the aquatic or riparian community.
Confidence interval – an interval that has the stated
probability (for example, 95 percent) of containing the
true value of a fixed (but unknown) parameter.
Designated Monitoring Area (DMA) – areas with pastures that represent the condition of riparian areas
affected by grazing within the pasture. Location of
effectiveness monitoring for vegetation and bank
parameters.
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
Degradation – any alteration of ecosystems such that
chemical, physical, or biological attributes are adversely affected.
Ecological integrity – the condition of an unimpaired
ecosystem as measured by combined chemical, physical (including habitat), and biological attributes.
Effectiveness monitoring – monitoring to determine
whether the correct implementation of land use practices is “effective” at moving resource condition in
some desired direction.
Historical data – data sets existing from previous
studies, which can range from handwritten field notes
to published journal articles.
Impact – a change in the chemical, physical (including
habitat), or biological quality or condition of a water
body caused by external sources.
Integrator reach – generally the downstream-most
reach within a 6th code watershed that is less than 2
percent gradient.
Macroinvertebrates – animals without backbones of a
size large enough to be seen by the unaided eye and
that can be retained by a U.S. Standard No. 30 sieve
(28 meshes per inch, 0.595 mm openings).
Managed site – the location under study of which the
condition is unknown and suspected of being adversely affected by anthropogenic influence.
Metric – a calculated term or enumeration representing some aspect of biological assemblage structure,
function, or other measurable aspect; a characteristic
of the biota that changes in some predictable way with
increased human influence; combinations of these
attributes or metrics provide valuable synthetic assessments of the status of water resources.
for ensuring the reliability of monitoring and measurement data; the process of management review
and oversight at the planning, implementation, and
completion stages of environmental data collection
activities. Its goal is to assure that the data provided
are of the quality needed and claimed.
Quality control (QC) – refers to the routine application
of procedures for obtaining prescribed standards of
performance in the monitoring and measurements
process; focuses on the detailed technical activities
needed to achieve data of the quality specified by data
quality objectives. Quality control is implemented at
the bench or field level.
Reference condition – the set of selected measurements or conditions of watersheds characteristic that
are minimally influenced by anthropogenic stressors.
Reference site – a specific locality that is minimally
influenced and is representative of the expected ecological integrity of other localities in the same watershed or nearby watersheds.
Riparian zone – transitional areas between terrestrial
and aquatic ecosystems, distinguished by gradients in
biophysical conditions, ecological processes, and biota.
They are areas through which surface and subsurface
hydrology connect water bodies with adjacent uplands. They include those portions of terrestrial ecosystems that significantly influence exchanges of energy and matter with aquatic ecosystems (in other
words, a zone of influence). Riparian areas are adjacent to perennial, intermittent, and ephemeral streams,
lakes, and estuarine-marine shorelines (National Research Council 2002).
Sentinel watershed – watersheds that are annually
sampled.
Nonpoint source – the origin of pollution in diffuse
sources such as agriculture, forestry, and urbanization. Such pollution is transported by rainfall or snowmelt runoff carrying pollutants overland or through
the soil.
Stressor – A disturbance that alters resources or acts
as a physiological disrupter such that the limits of an
ecosystem or population to adapt may be shifted, and
if the magnitude and duration are significant, the
system moves into a new state.
Population – an aggregate of individuals of a biological
species that are geographically isolated from other
members of the species and are actually or potentially
interbreeding.
Taxa richness – refers to the number of distinct species
or kinds (taxa) that are found in an assemblage,
community, or sample.
Quality assurance (QA) – includes quality control
functions and involves a totally integrated program
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
Transition reach – a stream reach that is generally
between 2 and 3 percent gradient.
13
Appendix I-A ____________________________________________________
Potential indicators for each biotic or physical consequence for PIBO effectiveness monitoring effort (adapted
from Sierra Nevada Framework aquatic monitoring plan).
Biotic or physical consequence
Potential indicators
Changes in runoff timing/magnitude
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Hydrographs - peak flow, frequency, and so forth
Watershed/near-stream road density
Elongation of stream into ditches (length)
a
Number of culverts and stream crossings
Culvert failure rate
a
Number of dams and diversions, acres of reservoirs
a
Length of perennial stream (ratio to intermittent)
Lake/pond water level
a
Mining history/extent
Ground-water conditiona
Direct habitat loss/fragmentation
and change
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Soil quality - compaction, cover, organicsa
Fragmentation of riparian vegetation - high contrast
Fragmentation of riparian vegetation - low contrast
a
Seral stage/structural complexity of riparian
Native riparian community mosaic, compositiona (spatial extent, mosaic,
nonriparian openings width of obligate riparian, root density)
In-stream/lake aquatic vegetation
a
Fire frequency
Fish/wildlife populations parameters (natality, survival, and mortality rates,
a
movements)
Fish/wildlife distribution, abundance, connectivitya
Timber harvest history
Location/size of recreation sites
Location/size of other disturbance
Changes in nutrient production/cycles
•
•
•
•
•
•
Chemical and nutrient content of water
a
Invertebrate community structure
Instream-channel carbon load
Fire frequency
Primary productivity/algal community
a
Native riparian community mosaic, composition
Introduction of toxins in water
and potability
•
•
•
•
•
•
Number of reported toxic spills - type and quantity
Water quality - direct measures
Sublethal/mortality effects on vertebratesa
Invertebrate community structurea
a
Seral stage/structural complexity of riparian
a
Number of culverts and stream crossings
Changes in fish/wildlife population
parameters
• Fish/wildlife population parameters (natality, survival, and mortality rates,
movements for priority species)a
• Fish/wildlife distribution, abundance, connectivitya
• Genetic diversity/similarity
• Fish health
• Angler/hunter surveys
Changes in community structure/
composition
• Community composition/integrity metrics
a
• Special habitats distribution and abundance
• Fish stocking history
Changes in sediment regime
• Instream - channel sediment measures
a
• Channel morphology
• Slope erosion indicatorsa
•
•
•
14
(con.)
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
Appendix I-A (Con.)
Changes in woody debris recruitment/
transport
•
•
•
•
•
Changes in water temperature
• Direct measuresa
• Canopy closure - over stream and ripariana
• Presence/distribution of special thermal habitats (cold pools, hot springs,
and so forth)
• Fish/wildlife distribution, abundance, connectivitya
• Length of perennial stream, ratio to intermittenta
Changes in stream channel morphology
• Habitat mapping (fast/slow water)
• Width-to-depth ratio, frequency of large pools, longitudinal profiles, residual
a
pool depth, bank angles, shore depth, substrate, and so forth
• Flood-plain interactions/connectivity
a
• Number of dams and diversions, acres of reservoirs
a
• Animal Unit Months (cattle and pack stock)
• Mining history/extenta
• Root density/bank stability
Changes in soil moisture/hydrologic
regime
• Native riparian community mosaic compositiona
• Soil quality - moisture, compaction, organicsa
• Presence/absence of a defined stream channel, width-to-depth ratio,
frequency of large pools, longitudinal profiles, residual pool depth, bank
a
angles, shore depth, substrate, and so forth
• Flood-plain interactions/connectivity
• Number of dams and diversions, acres of reservoirsa
• Animal Unit Months (cattle and pack stock)a
• Ground-water conditiona
Changes in riparian microclimate
•
•
•
•
a
Frequency, distribution, arrangement of LWD
Large tree density/diameter
a
Seral stage/structural complexity of riparian
a
Slope erosion indicators
Number of dams and diversions, acres of reservoirsa
Direct measures (temperature and humidity)a
Canopy closure - over stream and ripariana
Seral stage/structural complexity of ripariana
Fish/wildlife distribution, abundance, connectivitya
Indicator is useful for monitoring more than one consequence.
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
15
Part II:
Effectiveness Monitoring
for Streams and Riparian
Areas Within the Upper
Columbia River Basin:
Sampling Protocol for
Integrator Reaches Stream
Channel Parameters—2001
Richard Henderson
Eric Archer
Jeffrey L. Kershner
Part II Note
This document describes the sampling protocol used in 2001 and evaluated in the companion publication Archer
and others (2004). Many of the methods have since been modified following additional testing and review. In
addition, other methods that have we are currently testing were not included. See our website at http://
www.fs.fed.us/biology/fishecology/emp/ for the most recent version.
Part II Acknowledgments
The authors thank everyone who helped in developing and testing this protocol. First, we thank Tim Burton,
Kerry Overton, Sherri Wollrab, Darren Olsen, Jack Schmidt, Charles Hawkins, and many others for their advice
and review of the various drafts. We especially appreciate the critical input from over 50 summer technicians who
were invaluable in refining, clarifying, and evaluating the methods. We also thank Kate Dircksen and Emily Hall
for their artistic drawings, and Deanna Vinson for final edits. Finally, thanks to Regions 1, 4, and 6 of the Forest
Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, and the Idaho and Oregon/Washington State Offices of the Bureau of
Land Management, Department of the Interior, for funding the monitoring effort.
16
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
Introduction ____________________
An interagency team representing the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service (USDA FS), the
U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land
Management (USDI BLM), the U.S. Department of
Commerce, National Marine Fisheries Service, U.S.
Department of the Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service
(USDI FWS) was convened to develop a large-scale
monitoring program with the primary objective of
determining whether PACFISH/INFISH management
practices are effective in maintaining or restoring the
structure and function of riparian and aquatic habitats throughout the upper Columbia River Basin. A
list of attributes that were thought to be important in
defining aquatic habitat conditions and their relationship with listed species were identified. The team also
specifically stated that existing methods be used to
measure each attribute. This sampling protocol for
stream channel parameters (which is part of the “Plan
to Monitor Aquatic and Riparian Resources in the
Area of PACFISH/INFISH and the Biological Opinions for Bull Trout, Salmon, and Steelhead”) is the
result of that interagency effort.
The general sampling methods used by the program
and described in this report were taken from existing
sampling protocols. The following list includes the
original citations for each of the methods used:
• Harrelson and others (1994)—Reach layout, gradient, sinuosity, site map, and channel crosssections
• Wolman (1954); Overton and others (1997)—
Streambed particle counts
• Platts and others (1987)—Bank angle and undercut banks
• Bauer and Burton (1993); Platts and others
(1987)—Bank stability
• Overton and others (1997)—Defining habitat units
and large woody debris
• Lisle (1987)—Residual pool depths
• Hawkins, Charles; Vinson, Mark; Ostermiller, Jeff
(personal communication)—Macroinvertebrates
• Stevenson, Jan; Hawkins, Charles (personal
communication)—Periphyton
The individual methods were initially modified to
describe each attribute at a reach scale and increase
repeatability between observers. Additional changes
were made following 2 years of use, evaluation, and
peer review.
Finally, the protocol and the individual methods
were designed and tested specifically to sample a
stream “reach” and to monitor the effects of management activities in a specific set of stream types. Reach
lengths are a minimum of 20 bankfull channel widths
in length and range from 80 to 300 m. All reaches are
within unconstrained valley bottoms with gradients
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
less than 3 percent and have wadeable channels with
bankfull widths between 1 and 15 m. We feel strongly
that it should not be used in other stream types
without additional review and testing.
Sampling Order _________________
1. Locate the flag at the downstream end of the
reach.
2. Identify the pool tail near the flag and mark the
exact downstream end of the reach.
3. Measure alkalinity, conductivity, and take a Global Positioning System (GPS) reading.
4. Measure the average bankfull width at each of
the riffles.
5. Determine the reach length by measuring along
the thalweg and placing transect flags.
6. Conduct pool sampling (pool-tail depth, maximum depth, length).
7. Conduct particle size counts in the riffles.
8. Measure channel cross-sections.
9. Conduct transect sampling (bank angle, undercut depth, and bank stability).
10. Measure and count large woody debris.
11. Finish site maps, gradient, and sinuosity.
12. Review all forms (especially Form 1) for
completeness.
13. Review all entries in the data logger.
14. Check to make sure you have all equipment
and forms.
Establishing the Sample
Reach _________________________
After arriving at the site, locate the flag at the
downstream end of the reach. Identify the pool tail
near the flag and mark the exact downstream end of
the reach. Next, examine the bankfull indicators (described below) throughout the reach to identify the
bankfull elevation. For a more thorough discussion see
Harrelson and others (1994).
1. Examine streambanks for an active flood plain.
This is a relatively flat, depositional area that is
commonly vegetated and above the current water
level.
2. Examine depositional features such as point bars.
The highest elevation of a point bar usually indicates
the lowest possible elevation for bankfull stage.
3. A break in slope of the banks and/or change in the
particle size distribution from coarser bed load particles to finer particles deposited during bank overflow
conditions.
4. Define an elevation where mature key riparian
woody vegetation exists. The lowest elevation of birch,
alder, and dogwood can be useful, whereas willows are
often found below the bankfull elevation.
17
5. Examine the ceiling of undercut banks. This
elevation is normally below the bankfull stage.
6. Stream channels actively attempt to reform
bankfull features such as flood plains after shifts or
down cutting in the channel. Be careful not to confuse
old flood plains and terraces with the present indicators.
7. Depositional features can form both above and
below the bankfull elevation when unusual flows occur during years preceding the survey. Large floods
can form bars that extend above bankfull, whereas
several years of low flows can result in bars forming
below bankfull elevation.
Pools _________________________
Pool Length and Residual Pool Depth
Objectives
• Quantify the relative length of pool habitat in
each reach.
• Determine the average residual depth of pools.
Where to take measurements
Sample every pool within the sample reach that
meets the following criteria for summer pool conditions:
1. Pools are bounded by a head crest (upstream
break in slope) and a tail crest (downstream break in
slope).
2. Only consider main-channel pools (the thalweg
runs through the pool) and not backwater pools.
3. Pools are concave in profile.
4. Pools occupy greater than half of the wetted
channel width.
5. Pool depth is at least 1.5 times the pool tail depth.
6. Pool length is greater than its width.
Then measure the bankfull width at a representative point within each of the first four riffles. Record
the four bankfull widths on Form 1 and calculate an
average. Use the average width to determine the
width category from table II-1. The minimum stream
length is defined for each width category and is equal
to 20 times the width category. The upstream and
downstream boundaries of the reach are located at a
pool tail crest. Therefore, the upstream boundary is
located at the first pool tail encountered after the
minimum length has been attained.
How to take measurements
1. Measure the pool length, maximum depth, and
pool tail crest depth for each pool.
2. Measure pool length along the thalweg between
the head crest and tail crest and record to the nearest
centimeter.
3. The maximum depth represents the deepest point
in the pool and is found by probing with a depth rod
until the deepest point is located. The pool tail crest
depth is measured at the maximum depth along the
pool tail crest. Record both maximum pool depth and
pool tail crest depths to the nearest centimeter.
Alkalinity and Conductivity _______
Conductivity
Measure conductivity once at each reach using a
hand-held conductivity meter. Measure immediately
upon arrival and before walking through the channel
and disturbing the sediment. Take the reading near
the surface, in flowing water, and record in parts per
million (ppm) on Form 1 and in the electronic data
recorder. Recalibrate the conductivity meter at the
beginning of each 8-day sampling period.
Percent Surface Fines in Pool Tails
Objective
• Quantify the percentage of fine sediments on the
surface of pool tail substrate.
Alkalinity
Where to take measurements
1. Take measurements in the first four scour pools
in each reach.
Measure and record both total alkalinity and P
alkalinity once at the same time and location as
conductivity. Record measurements to the nearest
4 ppm. Specific instructions are found in the water
testing kit.
Table II-1—Width categories.
18
Average bankfull width
Width category
Minimum reach length
m
0 to 4
4.1 to 6
6.1 to 8
8.1 to 10
10.1 to 12
12.1 to 14
4
6
8
10
12
14
m
80
120
160
200
240
280
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
2. Only sample scour pools that meet the criteria
described below, even if that means less than four
pools are sampled.
3. Take three grid measurements within each pool
tail.
How to take measurements
1. Measure surface fines in all pools that are formed
by scouring, but not in pools formed by damming (such
as a log or debris pile).
2. Sample within the wetted, flowing area of the
pool tail (in other words, not in stagnant water).
3. The sampling area extends from the pool tail
crest upstream a distance equal to 10 percent of the
pool length. Divide the sampling area into three zones,
taking one sample in each zone. See figure II-1 to
determine how to define each zone.
4. Randomly toss the 14- by 14-inch grid once into
each zone. Count the number of intersections where
the substrate under the intersection (49 intersections
and the upstream right corner = 50) is less than or
equal to 6 mm. Use a Plexiglas viewer to reduce the
glare.
5. Vegetation may be growing under the grid, hindering the identification of particle size. First, attempt
to identify the particle size by moving the vegetation.
If this is not possible, then list the number of
nonmeasurable intersections on the data form.
Streambed Particle Size
Distribution ____________________
Pebble Counts
Objective
• Determine the percent fines less than 6 mm in
diameter (D), D16, D50 (median particle size),
and D84 within riffles/runs.
Where to take measurements
1. Take measurements within the first four riffle/
runs that meet the following criteria. If one of the first
four riffles/runs does not meet these criteria, use the
next upstream riffle/run if it is within the reach. Only
sample riffle/runs that meet these criteria, even if
fewer than four are sampled.
2. The riffle/run must be at least one-half as long (as
measured along the thalweg) as the bankfull width
“category.”
3. Sample in both channels when a side channel is
present.
How to take measurements
1. Divide 100 by the number of riffles/runs to be
sampled to determine the number of particles to sample
in each unit (for example, four riffle/run habitat
units = 25 particle counts per unit, and three riffle/
run habitat units = 33 particle counts per unit).
Figure II-1—Location of pool tail fines grid tosses in the pool tail showing the three sections and
distance upstream from the riffle crest.
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
19
2. Sample throughout each habitat unit by establishing four evenly spaced transects perpendicular to
the streamflow. First, determine the length of the
riffle by pacing its length. Walk back, placing flags at
20, 40, 60, and 80 percent of the riffles’ length to
establish transect locations.
3. You must measure a minimum of 100 particles in
each reach. Visually determine the number of heel-totoe steps needed between each particle measurement
so that the desired number of particles are sampled in
each habitat unit. For example, measure six to seven
particles per transect when there are four riffles, and
eight to nine particles per transect for three riffles.
4. If less than 25 particles were sampled after the
fourth transect, randomly choose a fifth transect and
sample with the same spacing pattern used for the
previous transects.
5. Sample the entire streambed width at each
transect starting with the heel of the boot at the point
where the streambed and streambank meet. Never
sample a particle on the streambank or on slump
blocks.
6. The upstream and downstream boundaries of the
riffle are rarely perpendicular to the channel. Only
sample particles within the riffle, and discontinue
sampling when the transect crosses into pool habitat.
7. Depositional features are considered streambed
material. End the count at the bankfull elevation
when depositional features extend above bankfull or
at the point where a depositional feature becomes
greater than 50 percent vegetated with perennial
species (fig. II-2).
8. Sample the particle at the toe of the foot. Reach
down with the forefinger (without looking down) and
pick up the first particle touched. Measure the middle
width (B axis) of the particle in mm. Visualize the B
axis as the smallest width of a hole that the particle
could pass through.
9. Record particles less than or equal to 4 mm as
4 mm. Record the width of larger particles to the
nearest millimeter.
10. Record the number of riffle/runs sampled on
Form 1 and in the data logger.
Channel Cross-Sections __________
Entrenchment
Objective
• Determine bankfull and wetted widths, width-todepth ratios, and the entrenchment ratio.
Where to take measurements
1. Measure one cross-section and flood-prone width
within the first four riffle/runs that meet the following
guidelines. If one of the first four riffles/runs does not
meet these criteria, use the next upstream riffle/run if
it is within the reach boundaries. Only sample riffle/
runs that meet these criteria, even if fewer than four
are sampled.
2. The channel must be relatively straight and have
clearly defined bankfull indicators along at least one
streambank. Do not sample a riffle/run if the entire
length of the riffle/run occurs at a meander or the
bankfull elevation cannot be determined.
3. When a side channel is present, use the main
channel to determine if the channel is straight or
meandered.
4. There are no minimum length criteria for the
riffle/run.
5. Locate cross-sections at the widest part of the
riffle. Measure widths between bankfull elevations
with the tape stretched perpendicular to the channel.
If islands are present, subtract the width of the island
above the bankfull elevation from the total width of
both channels.
6. Do not sample areas where human/animal crossings or old channels exist, thereby increasing the
channel width.
7. Take measurements at the point where one pool
ends and the other begins when riffle/runs are not
present.
Figure II-2—End pebble counts at the bankfull elevation when depositional features extend
above bankfull (left side). End pebble counts where the depositional feature becomes greater
than 50 percent vegetated (right side).
20
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
5. Measure only to the edge of the bank when an
undercut exists. Do not measure beneath the undercut.
6. Measure islands lower than the bankfull elevation as described above. For islands higher than
bankfull, measure the two channels separately using
the techniques described above. Make sure to record a
“0” depth at bankfull for both channels. Also record
“island” in comment column.
7. Measure the flood-prone width at each crosssection. The flood-prone width is the width of the
channel at twice the maximum bankfull depth as
determined during the cross-section measurement.
8. In wide meadows the flood-prone width can be
large. Do not obtain a precise measurement if it is
greater than three times the bankfull width. Record
the measurement as 100 m.
How to take measurements
1. Determine and flag the bankfull elevation on
each bank. Stretch the tape perpendicular to the
channel between bankfull elevations with the “zero”
end of the tape on the left bank (RL) looking downstream. Make sure the tape is straight and not bowed.
Measure and record bankfull width in meters to the
nearest centimeter.
2. Take a minimum of 10 equally spaced depth
measurements starting at bankfull on the left bank
and including bankfull on the opposite bank. Calculate the distance between measurements by dividing
the bankfull width by 10. Randomly chose the location
of the first measurement (using the random number
table on the data logger) between bankfull on the left
bank and the distance of the interval calculated above
(fig. II-3).
3. At each depth measurement record the distance
along the tape and the depth from the streambed to the
bankfull elevation in centimeters. At the bankfull
location of each bank, record the location along the
tape and a depth of “0.”
4. In addition, record the location and depth (to
bankfull elevation) at the left and right wetted edges,
maximum depth, and the riffle number. Record the
maximum bankfull depth and riffle number on Form 1.
Random number =
Bankfull width =
Interval =
Entrenchment width =
Distance on tape
(m)
Bankfull depth
(cm)
0.2 m
6.4 m
0.6 m
10.0 m
0
0
0.2
10
0.8
30
Channel Transects ______________
General Transect Measurements
Objective
• To define the location for measurements of bank
angle, bank stability, undercut depth, bank type,
bank material, and vegetation community type.
Left edge water
0.3
20
Right edge water
6.1
20
Maximum depth
2.7
45
1.4
2.0
2.6
3.2
3.8
4.4
5.0
5.6
40
38
44
40
35
33
30
30
6.1
0
Figure II-3—Channel cross-section showing measurements.
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
21
Where to take measurements
1. The distance between transects is the “width
category” used to determine reach length. Chose a
random number (k) between zero and the “width
category” value from a random number table. Establish the first transect (k) meters upstream from the
bottom of the reach. Place subsequent transects at
regular intervals (one “width category” value) as measured along the thalweg. Place flags in both banks.
2. Measure all variables on both the right and left
banks at each transect.
3. When a side channel is present, and it both leaves
and re-enters the main channel within the reach:
a. Measure the maximum bankfull depth of the
side channel 1 m down from the upstream end,
in the middle, and 1 m up from the downstream end.
b. Collect transect measurements on the outside
bank of the side channel if the average of the
three depths is greater than or equal to onehalf of the average maximum bankfull depth
calculated from channel cross-sections.
c. If not, take measurements on the bank of the
island associated with the main channel.
4. When a side channel or old channel enters or
leaves the main channel, but this channel either began
or ended outside the reach:
a. Only take measurements if the bank is associated with the main channel. Otherwise enter
999 for all transect measurements.
b. Measure newly forming banks at the junction
with old channels if the bank height is greater
than or equal to the bankfull elevation.
c. If the height of the newly formed bank is less
than the bankfull elevation and the bank behind it is associated with the side channel,
enter 999.
5. In a few limited situations where a tight meander
occurs, the transect may cross a point bar without
intersecting the actual bank (located behind the point
bar). Enter 999 in this situation.
6. Depositional features such as point bars are
considered depositional when perennial vegetation
cover is less than 50 percent and considered streambank
when greater than or equal to 50 percent vegetated.
increase measurement precision. The bank angle methodology is complex and describes many different situations. The process will be easier if you use the following steps at each location before taking measurements.
Define these locations at each flag.
÷ The location where the streambed and bank meet—
The streambed is composed of particles that are
transported by the stream during high flows. The
bank is normally composed of finer material and
is consistent with the soil type throughout the
riparian area.
÷ Scour line (SL)—Locate the scour line by examining features along the streambank. The ceiling of
undercut banks, limit of sod forming vegetation,
and limit of perennial vegetation are useful in
identifying the SL. On depositional features such
as point bars, the SL is often defined by the limit
of perennial vegetation, or by an indentation in
the bar (locally steep area) just above the SL.
÷ Bankfull elevation—Use indicators described in
the “Establishing the Sample Reach” section.
÷ First flat, depositional feature—This feature defines the upper boundary of the streambank that
will be assessed for both bank angle and stability.
Stop the measurement at the first flat, depositional feature beginning at the bankfull elevation
up to twice the bankfull elevation. If this feature
is not present, stop the measurement at twice the
bankfull elevation.
2. Determine whether slumping has occurred and if
the slump block is still attached to the streambank. If
so, use the rules described for “nonundercut” banks
(# 1 below) to identify the measurement location.
3. If the bank is inaccessible at a transect (in other
words, dense vegetation or a debris jam), record 999.
How to take measurements
1. For a nonundercut bank, lay a depth rod along
the bank and perpendicular to the channel at the exact
location of the transect flag. Place a clinometer on top
of the depth rod (not on the sides) and record the angle
to the nearest degree.
Where to take measurements
1. These methods were describe by Platts and others (1987) and have been more thoroughly defined to
a. If the bank slopes away from the streambed,
the bank angle is greater than 90∞ from horizontal. To obtain the actual angle for these
banks, subtract the value on the clinometer
from 180 (for example, the clinometer reading
is 30; 180 - 30 = 150∞).
b. Measure the angle from the base of the bank
(where the streambed and bank meet) up to
the first flat, flood-plain like surface located
at or above the bankfull elevation but at less
than twice the maximum bankfull elevation.
Add the average maximum bankfull depth
22
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
Bank Angle (Normal and Undercut)
Objective
• Quantify bank angle and the frequency of undercut banks within the reach.
from cross-sections to the bankfull elevation
at each transect to determine the upper limit
for bank measurements.
c. Streambanks are rarely one continuous angle
from the streambed to the first flat, depositional feature. When a bank has more than
one angle, consider each angle with a vertical
height of greater than or equal to 10 cm.
d. Some banks rise steeply from the streambed
and then become less steep near the flat floodplain like surface (convex). Measure the angle
of the lower portion of the bank if it is taller
than the upper portion (fig. II-4). Similarly,
measure the angle of the upper portion of the
bank if it is taller (fig. II-5).
e. The same concept applies to concave shaped
banks.
f. It is difficult to accurately measure the angle
when the bank rises in a stair-step fashion. A
stair-step bank is defined as three or more
separate angles each greater than or equal to
10 cm in vertical height. This applies to concave, convex, and relatively straight banks.
Measure the average angle by laying the
depth rod along the outer corner of the steps
(fig. II-6). The bottom of the depth rod will be
on the streambed and not where the streambed and bank meet.
Figures II-4 and II-5—Measure the tallest angle when the bank has two dominant angles.
Figure II-6—Measure the angle of banks with three or more angles by laying the
rod along outer edges.
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
23
g. Depositional features are not considered part
of the bank. On unvegetated depositional features such as point bars, start the measurement at the point where the top of the depositional feature and streambank meet (fig. II-7).
h. Do not measure if the deposition ends at or
above the first flat, flood-plainlike feature and
record 999 (fig. II-8).
i. Use the point where the depositional feature
becomes greater than 50 percent vegetated
(perennial species) to define were the deposition ends and bank begins (fig. II-2).
j. Use the rules from bank stability to define the
location of bank angle measurements when
slump blocks are still attached to the bank.
Include the slump block if the bottom of the
fracture feature is elevationally above the SL
(fig. II-9). Measure the angle of the fracture
feature behind the slump block if the bottom of
the fracture feature is elevationally equal to or
below the SL (fig. II-10).
k. As with slump blocks, view logs (greater than
or equal to 10 cm) and rocks (greater than or
equal to 15 cm) as part of the bank if they are
embedded within the bank. If the rock or log is
partially embedded, consider it embedded if
the bottom of the space between the rock/log
and the bank is elevationally above the SL.
Measure the bank behind the rock/log if the
space is elevationally below the SL.
2. If the bank is undercut or vertical (less than 90∞),
the bank angle can be read directly from the clinometer. Measure from underneath the overhang using
the following criteria:
a. The undercut must be greater than or equal to
5 cm deep, greater than or equal to 10 cm in
height, and greater than 10 cm in width.
b. Overhanging bank angles are measured from
the deepest point of the undercut up to the
ceiling of the overhang (fig. II-11).
c. Occasionally, the back of the undercut will be
a consistent depth, thereby lacking a deepest
point (fig. II-12). Place the depth rod at the
highest elevation, resulting in the smallest
angle (angle B).
d. Enter the angle as “1∞” if the deepest part of
the undercut is elevationally above the ceiling
(fig. II-13).
e. In some situations, there will be an undercut
with a ceiling below bankfull and a second undercut with a ceiling above bankfull. Measure
the lower undercut and ignore the upper one.
3. Take a horizontal undercut depth measurement
using the following criteria:
Figure II-7—Begin measuring the angle from
the point where the deposit and bank meet.
Figure II-8—Do not measure an angle when the
deposit covers the first flat, flood-plain-like feature.
Record 999 for bank angle.
24
a. Measure undercut depths at the same location
as the bank angle. After measuring the angle,
leave the end of the rod against the deepest
point of the undercut and drop the rod until it
is horizontal to the water surface and perpendicular to the stream channel. Measure the
distance from the deepest point to the outer
edge of the bank to the nearest centimeter
(fig. II-11).
b. The previous criteria are for typical undercut
banks where the ceiling of the overhang is
below or equal to the bankfull elevation. In
situations with active erosion or cut banks, the
ceiling of the overhang may be above the
bankfull elevation. These banks are measured
similar to nonundercut banks. Place the bottom of the depth rod where the streambed and
streambank meet and the top at the outer edge
of the bank above the undercut. Record the
undercut depth as 999 when the angle is less
than 90∞ (fig. II-14 and II-15).
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
Figures II-9 and II-10—Location of bank angle measurements with a slump block still attached and relative
to the scour line.
Figure II-11—Measure undercut bank angle from
the deepest point to the ceiling of the undercut and
depth from the deepest point to the outer edge of
the bank in centimeters.
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
Figure II-12—Undercut banks with a
constant depth are measured with the base
of the depth rod at the highest elevation
(angle B, not angle A).
25
Bank Stability
Objective
• Calculate the percent of the streambank that is
stable.
Where to take measurements
This method was described by Bauer and Burton
(1993) and Overton and others (1997). They have been
modified and more thoroughly defined to increase
measurement precision. The following guidelines define the area of bank to evaluate:
Figure II-13—Take the depth measurement with
the depth rod horizontal and directly underneath
the ceiling. Record the angle as 1∞.
1. Evaluate streambank stability when water is at
or below the SL.
2. The stability plot is 30 cm wide (15 cm on each
side of the transect flag) and perpendicular to the
streambank (not stream channel).
3. The sample area includes the portion of the
streambank that is above the SL and at the steepest
angle to the water surface. The measurement extends
up to the first flat, depositional feature located at
bankfull or up to twice the bankfull elevation (fig. II-16).
4. Unstable features are counted if greater than or
equal to 10 cm at the widest point. Record the unstable
< 90o
Undercut
Depth = 999
Figures II-14 and II-15—Undercut banks with the ceiling above bankfull are measured from where the
streambed and bank meet to the outside edge of the undercut.
26
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
c. At least 50 percent of the bank surfaces are
protected by rocks of cobble size (15 cm) or
larger.
d. At least 50 percent of the bank surfaces are
protected by logs of 10 cm in diameter or
larger.
e. At least 50 percent of the bank surfaces are
protected by a combination of the above.
2. Finally, use the classification key to assign and
record a stability class as defined below:
Figure II-16—Location of bank stability plots on
banks that extend above two times bankfull (left) and
banks with a flood plain at bankfull (right).
feature when both stable and unstable features occur
at the same plot.
5. Hoof prints by themselves are not a sign of instability unless they move the bank by greater than or
equal to 10 cm.
6. Slump blocks that have fractured but are still
attached to the bank can be large enough to function
as part of the bank. They may also have a flat, floodplainlike feature at or above bankfull. They are classified as a fracture feature and evaluated under Part III
of the section “Streambank Stability Classification
Key.”
7. Do not evaluate the bank as fractured if the
bottom of the fracture feature is elevationally above
two times the bankfull elevation.
How to take measurements
1. Streambank cover is an assessment of the percent of bank protected. Banks are considered “covered” if they show any of the following features.
a. Perennial vegetation ground cover is greater
than 50 percent (moss is not perennial).
b. Roots of vegetation cover more than 50 percent of the bank (deep rooted plants such as
willows and sedges provide such root cover).
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
• CS = Covered and stable (nonerosional). Streambanks are both covered and stable as defined
above.
• CU = Covered and unstable (vulnerable).
Streambanks are covered but unstable as defined
above. These banks are typically observed in meadows where breakdown, slumping, and/or fracturing is present along the bank, yet vegetative cover
is abundant.
• US = Uncovered and stable (vulnerable). Streambanks are uncovered but stable as defined above.
Uncovered, stable banks are typical of banks
trampled by concentrations of ungulates. Such
trampling flattens the bank so that slumping
and breakdown do not occur even though vegetative cover is significantly reduced or eliminated.
This class also includes situations where the
streambank is not present due to excessive
deposition.
• UU = Uncovered and unstable (erosional and
depositional). Streambanks are not covered or
stable as defined above. These comprise the typical bare, eroding streambanks and include all
banks at a steep angle to the water surface with
little cover.
• FB = False bank. Streambanks have slumped in
the past but have been stabilized by vegetation.
These banks are usually lower than existing banks
and generally provide no cover to fish.
• 999 = Unclassified. Areas along the bank where
side channels, tributaries, springs, and so forth,
cause an opening or where brush is too thick to
make an assessment.
27
Streambank Stability Classification Key ______________________________
Depositional bank—A streambank with deposition extending above the SL.
Scour bank—A streambank with no deposition or deposition is below or equal to the elevation of the SL.
Scour line—On undercut banks it is defined as the elevation of the ceiling of the undercut. On nonundercut scour
banks and depositional banks it is defined as the lower limit of perennial vegetation.
Slump block—That piece of the bank that is detaching or has detached from the streambank.
Crack—A crack in the streambank (start of a fracture feature), but the slump block has not begun detaching from
the bank.
Fractured—Slump block has at least partially broken from the bank and is separated from its original location
by greater than or equal to 10 cm.
Fracture feature—The piece of the bank (usually vertical) exposed by the detaching of the slump block.
Covered—Perennial vegetation cover is greater than 50 percent, roots and root mats cover more than 50 percent
of the bank, at least 50 percent of bank consists of rocks greater than or equal to 15 cm in size, or at least
50 percent of bank is covered by large woody debris (LWD) greater than or equal to 10 cm in diameter.
I. Streambank present ............................................................................................................................. go to II
Streambank absent (side channel, tributary, slew) ............................................................................ 999
II. Streambank = Scour bank .................................................................................................................... go to III
Streambank = Depositional bank (fig. II-17)
Bank covered ..................................................................................................................................... CS
Bank not covered .............................................................................................................................. UU
Bank not present due to excessive deposition ................................................................................. US
III. Bank is not fractured, or the bank is fractured with the slump block no longer
attached to the streambank and is either lying adjacent to the breakage or absent ........................ go to IV
Bank is fractured with the slump block still attached (fig. II-17)
A. The bottom of the fracture feature is elevationally below the SL (view only the
fracture feature behind the slump block)
Bank not covered
Bank angle within 10∞ of vertical (less than 80 m or greater than100 m) ...................... UU
Bank angle not within 10∞ of vertical ................................................................................ US
Bank covered ............................................................................................................................... CS
B. The bottom of the fracture feature behind the slump block is elevationally above the
SL (view the bank as the slump block and fracture feature the vertical, exposed bank)
Bank not covered ......................................................................................................................... UU
Bank covered
Fracture feature not covered .............................................................................................. CU
Fracture feature covered (and reconnected to bank) ........................................................ FB
IV. No crack visible from the SL up to a point 15 cm behind the top of the bank. .................................. Go to V
A crack is visible within this area (fig. II-17)
Bank is not covered ..................................................................................................................... UU
Bank covered ............................................................................................................................... CU
V. Streambank does not display signs of instability, or if a fracture feature is present, the
slump block is no longer attached to the streambank (fig. II-18)
Bank not covered
Bank angle within 10∞ of vertical (less than 80 m or greater than100 m) ...................... UU
Bank angle not within 10∞ of vertical ................................................................................ US
Bank covered ............................................................................................................................... CS
28
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
Figure II-17—Examples of bank instability types described in sections II, III, and IV in the Classification
Key. The actual stability class chosen depends on whether the bank is covered or uncovered.
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
29
Figure II-18—Examples of bank stability types described in section V in the Classification Key.
30
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
Large Woody Debris _____________
Large Woody Debris Counts
Reach Description
Measurements __________________
Objective
Sinuosity and Valley Length
• Quantify the number and size of large woody
debris pieces that are present within the bankfull
channel.
Where to take measurements
Collect measurements along the entire reach.
How to take measurements
1. Consider all large woody debris within the
bankfull channel. This includes “spanners” (single
pieces of large woody debris that span the width of the
stream but are located above the water) if they are
below the bankfull elevation.
2. Estimate the length and diameter of all large
woody debris pieces, including those lying singularly
and those in aggregates. Each piece must be greater
than 3 m in length OR have a length equal to or greater
than two-thirds the wetted width of the stream. Each
piece must be at least 10 cm in diameter one-third of
the way up from the base.
3. Measure the length and circumference for every
fifth piece at reaches with less than 20 pieces of wood
and every tenth piece at reaches with greater than 20
pieces of wood.
4. Estimate and record the percentage (by volume)
that is submerged at bankfull flows for each piece.
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
Sinuosity is a measure of how much the stream
channel meanders within the valley bottom. Measure
the length of the stream channel along the thalweg
and divide that length by the straight-line distance
between the top and bottom of the sample reach.
Measure the straight-line distance from the points
where the thalweg crosses the top and bottom of the
reach and record as “valley length.” Record the data on
Form 1.
Reach Gradient
Stream gradient is the elevation change from the
water surface at the downstream end of the reach to
the water surface at the upstream end (pool tail to pool
tail). Measure the elevation change twice, with the
level at a different position each time, and record to the
nearest centimeter. Record the average if the two
measurements are within 10 percent of each other. If
not, take a third measurement and average it with one
of the originals.
31
32
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
Part III:
Effectiveness Monitoring
for Streams and Riparian
Areas Within the Upper
Columbia River Basin:
Sampling Protocol for
Integrator Reaches
Vegetation Parameters
Marc Coles-Ritchie
Richard C. Henderson
Part III Note
This document describes the sampling protocol used in 2001 and evaluated in the companion
publication Coles-Ritchie and others (in preparation). Many of the methods have since been modified
following additional testing and review. Beginning in 2003, we began collecting species cover data
instead of community type cover data for the greenline and riparian cross-secitons. See our website at
http://www.fs.fed.us/biology/fishecology/emp/ for the most recent version
Part III Acknowledgment
We are indebted to Alma Winward for many of the methods and concepts contained in this protocol. We
thank the many biological technicians who used these methods and provided valuable feedback. The
drawings in this section were done by Emily Hall and Carrie Kennedy.
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
33
Introduction ____________________
Sampling Order _________________
An interagency team representing the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service (USDA FS), the
U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land
Management (USDI BLM), the U.S. Department of
Commerce, National Marine Fisheries Service, U.S.
Department of Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service
(USDI FWS) was convened to develop a large-scale
monitoring program with the primary objective of
determining whether PACFISH/INFISH management
practices are effective in maintaining or restoring the
structure and function of riparian and aquatic habitats throughout the upper Columbia River Basin. A
list of attributes that were thought to be important in
defining aquatic habitat conditions and their relationship with listed species were identified. The team also
specifically stated that existing methods be used to
measure each attribute. This sampling protocol for
vegetation parameters (which is part of the “Plan to
Monitor Aquatic and Riparian Resources in the Area
of PACFISH/INFISH and the Biological Opinions for
Bull Trout, Salmon, and Steelhead”) is the result of
that interagency effort.
The sampling methods for this program were taken
from existing sampling protocols. This vegetation sampling protocol is based on three methods developed by
Winward (2000): (1) greenline composition, (2) vegetation cross-section composition, and (3) woody species
regeneration. Another method is also used, effective
ground cover assessment, which is based on soil quality monitoring methods developed by the USDA Forest Service Intermountain Region (R4). Modifications
were made following 2 years of use, evaluation, and
peer review.
The protocol and the individual methods were designed and tested specifically to sample a stream
“reach” and to monitor the effects of management
activities in a specific set of stream types. This is
done by collecting data about the abundance of vegetation types and age classes of woody species at the
reach scale. The vegetation sampling at a reach
corresponds to 110 m of streambank. All reaches are
within unconstrained valley bottoms with gradients
less than 3 percent and have wadeable channels with
bankfull widths between 1 and 15 m. We feel strongly
that it should not be used in other stream types
without additional review and testing.
Data, at the reach and basin scale, are analyzed to
detect change over time as well as spatial variability
due to environmental or management differences. The
data analysis techniques are presented in separate
documents.
The riparian vegetation at each sample reach is
assessed using four methods: greenline (Winward
2000), vegetation cross-section (Winward 2000), effective ground cover (Intermountain Region 1989), and
woody species regeneration (Winward 2000). The
greenline and vegetation cross-section methods estimate the cover of plant community types. Effective
ground cover estimates ground cover in general categories. Woody species regeneration estimates the
number of woody plants in different age classes. The
following list outlines the order of things to do at each
site, and the rest of this document explains these items
in detail:
34
1. Determine which vegetation classification to use.
2. Identify dominant plants (using field guides) and
community types (using vegetation classifications).
3. Establish and flag the sample area.
4. Collect greenline data.
5. Collect woody species regeneration data.
6. Collect vegetation cross-section data.
7. Collect effective ground cover data (in conjunction with vegetation cross-sections).
8. Collect greenline community type data at stream
transects (with stream technicians).
9. Collect and label one specimen.
Riparian Vegetation
Classifications __________________
Riparian vegetation classifications have been developed for many portions of the Western United
States. These classifications are based on data from
multiple sites that have similar, repeating assemblages of species. A “community type” or “plant association” represents communities that have similar,
but not necessarily identical, species composition in
both the overstory and understory. The data collector
should be familiar with the classification and its
dichotomous key before collecting data at a site. Use
the following riparian vegetation classifications
within the Upper Columbia Basin (table III-1). It is
important that the correct classification be used for
each Region (table III-2). If the principal classification for the area does not cover all of the vegetation
for a site, then the approved classifications for adjacent areas may be used (table III-2).
How to Use Vegetation Classifications
Use the key to help determine the possible community types for a given area of vegetation (a number of
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
Table III-1—Riparian vegetation classifications for the interior Pacific Northwestern United States.
Authors
Code
Riparian vegetation classification
Kovalchik (2001)
KOV-WA
Classification and Management of Eastern Washington’s
Riparian and Wetland Sites
Hansen and others (1995)
HANSEN
Classification and Management of Montana’s Riparian
and Wetland Sites
Crowe and Clausnitzer (1997)
CROWE
Mid-Montane Wetland Plant Associations of the Malheur,
Umatilla and Wallowa-Whitman National Forests
Manning and Padgett (1995)
MANNING
Riparian Community Type Classification for Humboldt and
Toiyabe National Forests, Nevada and Eastern California
Youngblood and others (1985)
YOUNGBLOOD
Riparian Community Type Classification of Eastern Idaho Western Wyoming
Padgett and others (1989)
PADGETT
Riparian Community Type Classification of Utah and
Southeastern Idaho
Kovalchik (1987)
KOV-OR
Riparian Zone Associations: Deschutes, Ochoco,
Fremont, and Winema National Forests
Crawford (2001)
CRAWFORD
Initial Riparian and Wetland Vegetation Classification and
Characterization of the Columbia Basin in Washington
steps) at a site. Read the description in the classification to see that it matches what you observe, especially
the associated species and their cover values. If they
are similar, then that is the community type to record.
If not, go through the key again to see what other
community types might describe the area of interest.
Establishing the Sample Area _____
1. Determine the number of steps you take over a
110-m distance. In a field or meadow measure 110 m
and place a marker at each end. Walk the distance
with a normal pace and record the number of steps
taken. A clicker is useful to tally the steps. Walk the
distance at least five times and determine the average
number of steps per 110 m, which will be the length of
the greenline sample area. This only needs to be done
once at the beginning of the field season. You may
want to check your steps per 110 m a few times during
the field season and adjust your steps if necessary.
2. From the downstream end of the reach, determine the sample area by stepping off 110 m of
streambank along the stream’s right bank, as shown
by the dashed lines in fig. III-1. This provides a
representative area of streambank and riparian vegetation and a consistent 0.1-acre sample area for the
woody species regeneration data.
3. Place yellow flags (noted in fig. III-1) at the
number of steps that correspond to 0, 27.5, 55, 82.5,
and 110 m (to determine this interval divide the total
number of steps per 110 m by four). These flags
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
identify the locations of the five vegetation crosssections, as well as the extent of the sampling area for
the greenline and woody species regeneration data
collection (fig. III-1). Vegetation flags are one color
(yellow), which is a different color than flags used by
the stream technicians. It is preferable to place the
flags on just one side of the stream (right bank whenever possible), which will help you relocate them. Note
in fig. III-1 that the stream’s right is the right bank
while facing downstream.
Greenline ______________________
Objectives
• Estimate the percent cover of community types
adjacent to the stream.
• Quantify ratings for successional status, bank
stability, and/or wetland status based on the community types.
• Estimate the percent cover of woody vegetation
adjacent to the stream.
Where to collect data
1. Begin at the upstream end of the greenline sampling area on the right bank (fig. III-1). Walk downstream and record the community types adjacent to
the stream for each step. Continue to the downstream
end of the reach. There will be multiple flags there
because that is also the bottom of the reach for the
stream crew.
2. Cross the stream perpendicular to the channel
and record community types while walking upstream
35
Table III-2—List of appropriate classifications by geographical area.
Crew
base
state
Forest / BLM
Deschutes
Ochoco
Malheur
Umatilla
OR Wallowa-Whitman
Okanogan
Colville
BLM Oregon-Washington
State
OR
OR
OR
OR
OR
WA
WA
OR
WA
Nez Perce
Payette
ID
ID
Boise
ID
Salmon-Challis
Sawtooth
ID
ID
Humboldt-Toiyabe
BLM Idaho
NV
ID
ID
Idaho Panhandle
Clearwater
Flathead
Kootenai
MT Lolo
Beaverhead-Deerlodge
Helena
Bitterroot
BLM Montana
36
ID
ID
MT
MT
MT
MT
MT
MT
MT
District/field
office
Principal riparian
vegetation
classification to
use
Other helpful riparian
vegetation classifications
All
All
All
All
All
All
All
Prineville
Wenatchee
Kov-OR
Kov-OR
Crowe
Crowe
Crowe
Kov-WA
Kov-WA
Crowe
Crawford
Crowe
Crowe
Crawford
Crawford
Crawford
Hansen
Hansen
Crawford, Kov-OR
Kov-WA
All
McCall - Krassil
New Meadows
Council
Weiser
Emmett
Others
All
Southern
Northern
All
Salmon
Challis
Cottonwood
Hansen
Crowe
Padgett
Crowe
Crowe
Crowe
Padgett
Padgett
Manning
Padgett
Manning
Padgett
Padgett
Padgett
Kov-WA, Crowe, Youngblood
Youngblood, Hansen, Kov-WA
Youngblood, Crowe
Padgett, Youngblood
Padgett, Youngblood
Padgett, Youngblood
Crowe, Youngblood
Crowe, Youngblood
Padgett, Youngblood
Crowe, Youngblood
Padgett
Crowe, Youngblood
Youngblood, Manning
Crowe, Youngblood
All
All
All
All
All
All
All
All
Missoula
Hansen
Hansen
Hansen
Hansen
Hansen
Hansen
Hansen
Hansen
Hansen
Kov-WA
Kov-WA
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
Upstream end
Downstream end
Figure III-1—Location for all vegetation sampling methods at a site.
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
37
along the left bank. Stop when perpendicular to your
most upstream flag on the opposite bank. It does not
matter that there are slightly different number of
steps on each side. The upstream end of the greenline
sampling area will probably not correspond to the top
of the stream crew’s upstream end point.
3. Define the greenline.
a. The greenline is the first line of perennial
vegetation adjacent to the stream channel
that is at least 0.3 m (1 ft) wide (fig. III-2 and
III-3).
b. Define the greenline at the base of the first line
of perennial vegetation on the streambank of
interest. Most of the time, looking at the canopy
(especially with sedges and other low growing
vegetation) is sufficient to determine the greenline. But canopy alone is not the greenline.
c. If plants are hanging over the edge of the
stream, but are not the first line of rooted
vegetation on that bank, then walk away from
the stream until the first line of rooted perennial vegetation is encountered. At that rooted
point, consider all the overstory and understory vegetation together to determine the
community type (right side of fig. III-3).
d. Early in the season the greenline may be
partially submerged, while later in the summer the greenline may be some distance from
the stream. Do not consider bare or sparsely
vegetated ground between the greenline and
the water (left side of fig. III-3).
e. When banks are eroding or when a stream
becomes entrenched, the greenline may be
located high above the stream and consist of
upland plants. In this case it is necessary to
record nonriparian communities along the
greenline because they are the first perennial
vegetation adjacent to the stream. Record
this nonriparian vegetation as “Upland” and
note the dominant species in the comment
line in the data logger (right side of fig. III-4
and III-5).
f. Always sample the main banks of the channel,
not islands. Figure III-2 identifies the location
of the greenline in relation to islands and
gravel bars. The stream technicians can help
you determine what is an island and what is
the main bank (they do that for the stream
cross-sections). In general, a peninsula becomes
an island when it is no longer connected on
both ends by a strip of vegetation with at least
25 percent cover and greater than 0.3 m (1 ft)
in width.
g. Do not consider scattered forbs, grasses, or
rushes on sandbars as the greenline (fig. III-6).
38
Most aquatic species are not counted as the
greenline because of their temporary nature,
unless the classification has a community type
for them (fig. III-6). Commonly observed species on sandbars or in the water that are usually not community types include:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Catabrosia aquatica (brookgrass)
Cardamine spp. (bittercress)
Mentha arvensis (field mint)
Mimulus guttatus (yellow monkey-flower)
Veronica americana (American speedwel)
Alopecurus aequalis (shortawn foxtail)
Alopecurus geniculatus (water foxtail)
Juncus ensifolius (sword-leaf rush)
How to collect data
1. Determine greenline community types at the
scale of each step (0.3 m by 1 step), which is different
than for the vegetation cross-sections. Use a modified
line-intercept method to tally the number of steps in
each community type.
2. Record steps of vegetation as you walk approximately parallel to the stream, not for steps that are
perpendicular to the stream. In general there should
be one step of vegetation for each step of stream (fig.
III-2 and III-6).
3. Use the classification keys to help you decide on
the community type. The key does not determine the
community type, as would a key for species identification. The key only suggests what community types to
consider. Consult the descriptions to determine the
appropriate community type. When two key leads fit,
then look at both descriptions to see which fits best. If
you cannot see that one fits better than another then
use the one that appears first in the key.
4. For each step, first look up to see if there is an
overstory and use that information as you go through
the key. If vegetation hangs over the greenline then it
is considered part of the community at that step. When
the keys ask for the dominant overstory species, they
generally refer to the species with the highest cover.
That usually means at least 25 percent cover, but it
varies in the different classifications.
5. Record the community type name on Form 5
(appendix III-B) the first time it is encountered and
use dots to record the number of steps. When that
community type is encountered again, add dots to the
tally of steps for that community type.
6. To be counted as a step of a community type, the
vegetation must cover at least one full step. Scattered
plants on a sandbar are not counted.
7. Only record data for community types described in
the classifications or new communities for which you
collect species data (see “Undescribed or New Communities” section). Do not record any physical features as
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
Figure III-2—The location of the greenline in relation to various bank features. Greenline
data are only collected where there is a dashed line. Greenline data are not collected where
there is a dotted line.
Figure III-3—Location of greenline. Note that the greenline is located on rooted vegetation,
not rocks or bare ground underneath the canopy.
Figure III-4—Location of greenline on banks with boulders, bare bank, and upland vegetation.
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
39
Figure III-5—Example of banks with upland vegetation. For the right bank there is no riparian vegetation,
so record upland for the greenline and for one step on the cross-section.
Figure III-6—Example of how community types are sampled along the greenline. Greenline data are only
collected where there is a dashed line. Greenline data are not collected where there is a dotted line.
greenline data, but you can note them in the comment lines.
8. The greenline may zig-zag back and forth because
of the dynamic state of the stream environment. If you
must step away from or toward the stream to find the
greenline do not tally the steps moving perpendicular
to the stream. Tally only the forward steps that correspond to a step of stream (fig. III-2 and III-6).
40
9. When encountering an obstacle such as a bush or
boulder, step around the obstacle but tally only the
forward steps (fig. III-6 and III-7). If the obstacle is
vegetation, look at the area where you would have
stepped to determine the community type. At locations with dense greenline vegetation it may be easier
to walk in the stream as you record the data (fig. III-7).
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
Vegetation Cross-Sections ________
Objectives
• Estimate the percent cover of community types
throughout the riparian area.
• Quantify a wetland rating based on the different
community types present in the riparian area.
Where to collect data
1. Sample five vegetation cross-sections within each
reach (fig. III-1). The first and last cross-sections
correspond to the upstream and downstream ends of
the greenline sampling area, respectively. Cross-sections 2, 3, and 4 are located at 1⁄4, 1⁄2, and 3⁄4 of the way
down from the upstream end of the greenline sample
area (fig. III-8).
2. The vegetation cross-section extends across the
riparian area perpendicular to the valley bottom, not
necessarily perpendicular to the stream.
3. The vegetation cross-section forms a continuous
line across the riparian area, but does not include the
stream.
4. Use a compass to determine the direction of the
valley bottom where the sample reach is located. Add
90∞ to the bearing and align the compass spindle to the
new bearing. Use this bearing for all five cross-sections and record it on the data sheet. Always begin at,
and include, the greenline and walk toward the edge of
the riparian area in the direction of the compass
bearing.
5. Then walk back to the greenline collecting Effective Ground Cover data (see “Effective Ground Cover”
section below). Cross the channel, ignoring the steps in
the channel, and continue the cross-section in the
opposite direction of the compass bearing until the
riparian vegetation ends or 27.5 m.
How to collect data
1. Use a modification of the line-intercept method to
collect data. This is similar, but not exactly the same,
as the method for the greenline.
2. As you walk through communities record the
number of steps for each community type on Form 6
(appendix III-B). For the cross-sections consider a
larger spatial scale than for the greenline (fig. III-8).
Do not look at the scale of each step, but rather
consider the vegetation in an area of at least a few
square meters and look for multiple individuals. This
will help you identify boundaries between different
communities. There may be only one community or
there may be several, but there should not be a different community type for each step (that is too small of
a scale). This is especially important when trees or
shrubs are scattered. Try to draw an imaginary line
between the different communities and ignore small
variability within those communities. A lone individual plant would not determine the community type
because one individual does not make a community.
Look for the dominant vegetation with multiple individuals (in other words, a community).
3. Include the greenline vegetation in the crosssection, but do not record any data between the
greenline and stream. Do not record anything for the
stream either.
4. A cross-section may cross the stream numerous
times if the channel is very sinuous (fig. III-9). Ignore
the steps when you cross the stream, and continue the
data collection where you exit the stream channel.
5. Cross-sections may be close together if the channel is very sinuous (fig. III-9), however, they should
not cross since they use the same bearing and are
therefore parallel.
Figure III-7—How to walk and tally steps when obstacles are encountered. Only the numbered steps (solid line) are
recorded. The unnumbered steps (dashed line) are not recorded.
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
41
Figure III-8—Lines represent vegetation cross-sections going through different
communities (some of which are encircled). Note that woody plants with less than
25 percent cover are in a separate community type than areas with greater than
25 percent cover.
Figure III-9—Example of cross-sections on a very sinuous stream.
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USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
6. If there is no riparian vegetation in the crosssection (right side of fig. III-5), then record just one
step as “upland” on each side of the stream and record
the dominant species (Artemisia tridentata, Juniperus
osteosperma, and so forth) in the comment line of the
data logger.
7. Each cross-section extends the width of the riparian zone up to a maximum distance of 27.5 m on each
side of the stream. Stop recording community type
data at 27.5 m, even when the riparian area continues,
and estimate the additional width of the riparian area
using the following categories (fig. III-10):
0 = Riparian area ends before 27.5 m are stepped
1 = Additional distance is less than distance walked
(less than the 27.5 m)
2 = Additional distance is 1x to 2x the distance walked
(27.5 to 55 m)
3 = Additional distance is 2x to 4x distance walked (55
to 110 m) or
4 = Additional distance is greater than 4x distance
walked (more than 110 m)
8. Distinguish the steps that are in the zone of
flow at two times the bankfull depth, or “twice
bankfull” (fig. III-11). The stream technicians will
flag or show you the point at which the twicebankfull elevation is exceeded along your five crosssections. Record steps between the stream and that
point as “within twice bankfull” (or “w”) and steps
beyond that point as “beyond twice bankfull” (or “b”)
Figure III-10—Estimations of distances of riparian vegetation on cross-sections.
Figure III-11—Example of vegetation cross-section area within and beyond twice-bankfull.
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
43
in the corresponding part of the sheet. Once you
cross the twice bankfull point do not record any
more steps as within twice bankfull even if the
elevation drops down again (fig. III-12). Some of the
same community types can be in both the “within”
and “beyond” sections, while other community types
will only be in one of the sections (fig. III-11).
9. If the riparian area is less than 27.5 m wide, it
will be necessary to determine exactly where the
riparian area ends. We define the edge of the riparian
area as the point where the vegetation changes from
riparian communities (plants that require moist conditions to survive) to upland communities (plants that
survive with moisture only from precipitation). Use
the community type classification to determine the
edge of the riparian area, based on the presence and
percent cover of riparian species. Riparian species
normally decrease in percent cover as one approaches
the edge of the riparian area. The point where they
become less than 25 percent (or what the key requires)
will be the edge of the riparian zone. There may be
riparian species outside of the riparian zone, but they
will be less than 25 percent cover. Other clues to
determine the edge of the riparian area:
a. Changes in landform generally correspond to
a change in the ground water depth and therefore a change in soil moisture. Such changes in
elevation and slope will affect vegetation and
often correspond to the edge of the riparian
area. Figure III-13 shows changes in landform
that correspond to changes in vegetation and
the edge of the riparian zone.
b. The presence of nonriparian species (Artemisa
tridentata, Chrysothamnus spp., and so forth)
may indicate that the area is never flooded or
wet. Do not collect data for nonriparian plant
communities.
Figure III-12—Example of vegetation cross-section. Note that while community types may drop below
two times bankfull after crossing the two times bankfull marker, they are still recorded as beyond two
times bankfull.
Figure III-13—Diagram showing changes in topography that correspond to different community types
and the edge of the riparian area (from Crowe and Clausnitzer 1997).
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USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
c. There are some species that occur often in the
transition zone between riparian and upland
areas. Consult regional classifications and
guides to determine what those indicator species are in each area. Some of these transition
species, depending on the region, include:
Dasiphora floribunda, formerly Potentilla
fruticosa (shrubby cinquefoil), Artemisia cana
(silver sagebrush), Populus tremuloides (quaking aspen), and Rosa spp. (rose species).
d. Some species are rhizomatous and can spread
underground from the riparian zone into the
upland zone, while still being connected to the
riparian area where there is water. These
species include: Juncus balticus (baltic rush)
and Equisetum spp. (horsetail) among others.
Use the classification to determine if the percent cover is high enough to consider it riparian.
e. Riparian species may grow outside of the riparian area because of a seep, another drainage, or water concentration along a road. Do
not include that vegetation when it is not a
part of the riparian area being sampled.
f. If a seep extends up a slope, do not continue
the cross-section up the slope. Draw an imaginary line extending the edge of the rest of the
riparian area and cut off the seep from the
area of data collection.
g. Use caution with “facultative” wetland species
such as Poa pratensis, which are capable of
growing in both dry and wet conditions.
Undescribed or “New”
Communities: for Greenline or
Vegetation Cross-Section Data
Collection ______________________
Undescribed communities will occasionally be encountered. When you encounter vegetation that does
not seem to be in the classifications for your area, use
the following rules, in the order they are presented:
1. Review the community type descriptions (especially the average cover and constancy data) again to
determine if the vegetation could fit a named community type. It is important that this information is
thoroughly reviewed in order to avoid extra work in
collecting and analyzing data.
2. If you do not find the community in the primary
classification for the area where you are working, look
in approved classifications that cover adjacent areas.
If there is a community type that matches, with a
similar species list, then use that community type and
note the author of the classification.
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
3. If you cannot find a community type that fits
and the unknown community is two or fewer steps,
lump the unknown community with adjacent community types.
4. If the three guidelines above do not result in a
named community type, then collect data on this “new
community” in the following manner:
a. Record the number of steps of the new community and name it “new1,” “new2,” and so
forth, in the order encountered at the reach
(start with new1 for each reach with a new
community).
b. Tie flagging at the beginning and end of the
new community so that you can return later to
collect detailed data. When all other data
collection is complete, return to collect new
community data.
c. Determine where to set up three plots, identified as “a,” “b,” and “c,” by dividing the distance
of the new community by four. Walk that
number of steps from the edge of the community and set up the first 1⁄2- x 1⁄2- m plot in front
of your toe (fig. III-14). The other two plots will
be that number of steps further, so that there
are three plots within the new community.
There will not be a plot at the beginning or end
of the new community because those are transition zones between communities.
d. Use Form 8, “New Community Species Data,”
(appendix III-B) to record the cover of all
species within the plots, using the cover classes
listed on the data sheet. If you do not know the
species then collect a specimen.
e. If this community is encountered again at this
stream then you may use the same “new”
name without having to collect more species
data.
f. For all new communities collect a specimen of
the species with the highest cover in the three
plots combined (see instructions for specimen
collection below).
g. In the data logger, enter new communities as
“new1,” “new2,” and so forth. If it says this is
not a valid type, then hit ok to use it anyway.
Note 1 - You should have few “new” communities
because the classifications include most plant communities, and because describing new communities is a
difficult process. If possible you should “fit” the vegetation in an existing community type (in other words
someone else has already done the detailed species
work for you). On the other hand, it is important to
document new communities so that we have data on
them that we can add to the existing classifications.
Note 2 - If you do document new communities, write
a description of them in your notebook and talk to
45
Figure III-14—Collecting new community data on cross-sections and greenline.
other vegetation technicians and Forest Service ecologists about the “new” communities to see if they have
observed similar communities, or if they might fit
within already classified communities.
Note 3 - Not all species in the community type will be
present in every community that fits within that
community type. If the combination of species at a site
are similar to a described community type but the
cover of those species seems different, you may still
use that community type, and make a note of the major
differences on the data sheet and in the comment line
of the data logger.
Effective Ground Cover __________
Objective
• Estimate the area with cover that inhibits erosion
versus the amount of bare ground within the
riparian area.
How to collect data
1. Collect ground cover data at each step while
returning to the stream, along each vegetation crosssection.
2. The area considered is a 2 cm diameter circle (size
of a quarter) located directly in front of your big toe
(fig. III-15).
3. Record the point as bare ground if greater than
50 percent of the area is bare ground (that is, less
than 50 percent of the area is covered by plants, plant
litter, or rock). Stagnant water with no vegetation is
also considered bare ground. Do not include moving
water as bare ground. If there is a side channel or
small tributary then skip those steps.
4. The point is considered covered if one or a combination of the following categories comprise greater
than 50 percent of the area. Record the cover category
that is dominant.
Where to collect data
Measure this parameter in conjunction with each of
the five vegetation cross-sections.
a. Live Vegetation - herbaceous vegetation,
shrubs, or trees with branches less than 1 m
above the ground. Branches above 1 m are not
considered vegetative cover for this method.
Bare ground under a tree with a canopy above
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USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
channel in order to not count the same area twice. This
will also prevent you from counting plants located on
the opposite bank.
5. Some species will not be counted because of our
inability to age them, such as colonial or rhizomatous
species. These species include: Salix exigua, Salix
wolfii, Salix planifolia, Salix commutata, Salix
eastwoodiae, Cornus sericea, and species of Vaccinium,
Symphoricarpos, Spiraea, Phyllodoce, and Arctostaphylos, among others. Consult Crowe and Clausnitzer
(1997) appendix III-D, “Rooting Habit” column, to
determine if a species is rhizomatous and therefore not
counted.
6. For mature individuals, distinguish whether they
are greater than 1 m tall or less than 1 m tall.
7. If there are more than 50 individuals of one
species age class, stop counting at 50 and record that
there are more than 50 individuals.
8. Estimate the age of woody individuals using one
of two methods, depending on whether they produce
many basal stems or just one stem (or a few).
Figure III-15—Area of consideration for recording
effective ground cover.
1 m is not considered live vegetation, except
for the trunk area.
b. Litter - dead plant material such as matted
grasses, leaves, twigs, branches, and so forth.
c. Rock - rocks greater than 25 mm.
Woody Species Regeneration _____
Objective
• Estimate the ratio of individuals in different age
classes of shrubs and trees to determine how
much regeneration of woody plants is occurring.
Where to collect data
Collect woody species regeneration data along the
length of the greenline (110 m) on both sides of the
stream for a 6-ft wide area, centered over the rooted
greenline (fig. III-16).
How to collect data
1. Identify plants rooted within 3 ft of either side of
the point where the greenline vegetation comes out of
the ground. Use a 6-ft pole to determine this area.
2. Do not count individuals with overhanging
branches that are not rooted within 3 ft of the greenline.
3. Record the age class and species of each woody
individual on Form 7 (appendix III-B).
4. In narrow streams (less than 1 m wide) do not let
the 6-ft pole go more than one-half way across the
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
a. Multiple-stemmed species grow additional
stems over time rather than adding growth
rings to existing stems. In general, the more
stems it has the older it is. For multiplestemmed species use table III-3 to estimate
their age. Stems rooted within 12 inches are
considered the same individual. Multiplestemmed species are primarily Salix species
(that are nonrhizomatous).
b. Single-stemmed species add growth rings to
the existing stems each year. These species do
not put on a new stem each year, although
they may have more than one stem. The plant
grows taller and thicker stems as it gets older.
The following species tend to grow as singlestemmed individuals: Betula occidentalis,
Prunus virginiana, and most species of Alnus,
Populus, Pinus, Picea, Abies, and Crataegus.
Use table III-4 to estimate the age of each treelike woody individual. If possible, look at nearby
individuals of the same species to compare the
size of mature to young. The height listed in
meters is only a rough guideline.
The terms may not always seem appropriate, but
don’t let that bother you. For example, mature individuals can be a range of sizes. Just follow the protocol.
Plant Communities at Stream
Transects ______________________
Objective
• Determine the relationship of stream data and
greenline vegetation at the 20 stream transects.
47
Figure III-16—Data collected on woody species regeneration.
Table III-3—Multiple-stemmed species (shrubs).
48
Number of stems (at ground level)
Age class
1
2 to 10
Greater than 10; greater than 1/2 alive
Greater than 10; greater than 1/2 dead
Seedling/sprout
Young
Mature
Decadent
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
Table III-4—Single-stemmed species (treelike).
Height
Age class
Less than 1/2 mature height; less than 0.3 m tall
Less than 1/2 mature height; 0.3 to 2 m tall
Near full height; greater than 2 m tall
Where to collect data
1. The vegetation technician records the community type at each stream transect. Most of these
transects will be in the area where you have already
collected greenline data, so you will have already
determined the community types. If the stream reach
extends upstream of the greenline sample area then
you may see some different community types.
2. Each stream transect is marked by two flags, one
on each bank, which are perpendicular to the channel.
Imagine a line connecting those two flags and determine where that line intersects the greenline on each
side of the stream. Those two points on the greenline
are the center of an approximately one step by one step
area for which you will determine the community type
(fig. III-17).
How to Collect Data
1. Follow the instructions for the greenline method
to determine the community type.
2. In addition, use the classes below to determine
the total cover of vegetation in that one step by one
step plot.
3. Cover classes (Daubenmire 1959).
a. 1 = 0 to 5 percent cover—not used because
there is not enough cover to be the greenline.
b. 2 = 5 to 25 percent cover
c. 3 = 25 to 50 percent cover
Seedling/sprout
Young
Mature
d. 4 = 50 to 75 percent cover
e. 5 = 75 to 95 percent cover
f. 6 = 95 to 100 percent cover
4. There is no data sheet for this method. Record
these data in the “Stream” application of the data
logger under “Transects/GLComTyp.” It is best to
collect these data with the stream technicians as they
are doing their stream transects.
Collecting Specimens ____________
When to collect plant specimens
1. At each reach collect a specimen of an abundant
species that helps to determine a community type.
2. If you are unsure of a species that is important in
determining a community type, collect a specimen. It
is not necessary to collect species that have low cover
values.
3. For each “new” community, collect a specimen of
the most abundant species based on the data from the
three plots that you sample.
How to collect specimens
1. Follow the 1 in 20 rule (in other words, only
collect a specimen if there are 20 more individuals
present). This will prevent you from harming an endangered species.
Figure III-17—Sampling areas at stream transects. Note that data are collected at the
intersection of stream transects and the greenline, not at the flag positions.
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
49
2. For each specimen, fill out and attach the “Plant
Label” provided.
3. Collect as much of the plant as you can, including
roots (if possible) of sedges, grasses, and other herbaceous plants. Try to collect a specimen with a flower or
mature fruits. For woody plants collect branches with
leaves and flowers/fruits if possible. Collect two individuals or branches (under one label) so that we can
dissect some without destroying everything.
4. For new communities, take a photo of the new
community that includes the species from which you
collected a specimen and record the photo number on
the plant label.
5. Place the labeled specimens between newspaper
and then between the felt blotters in the plant press.
Specimens that are not well labeled are useless. It is
essential that you note on the label the community
type, or new community number, that you recorded it
under.
6. Key out unknown species (a microscope may be
necessary) as soon as possible. If you are able to
identify the plant then make the change on the label.
Also review the classification to identify the community type and make the change on the data sheet and
data logger if you still have them. If you no longer have
access to the data sheet and data logger, or you cannot
identify the species, then pass the labeled specimen on
to the vegetation supervisor.
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policy-relevant regional trends over time. Ecological Applications. 8: 246–257.
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Intermountain
Region. 1989. Soil quality monitoring methods. Internal publication. Ogden, UT. 60 p.
U.S. Department of the Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service. 1998.
Endangered and threatened wildlife and plants: determination of
threatened status for the Klamath River and Columbia River
distinct population segments of bull trout final rule. Federal
Register June 10, 1998 (Volume 63, Number 111, Pages 31647–
31674) 50 CFR Part 17, RIN 1018-AB94.
Whittier, T. R.; Paulsen, S. G. 1992. The surface waters component
of the Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Program
(EMAP): an overview. Journal of Aquatic Ecosystem Health. 1:
119–126.
Winward, A. H. 2000. Monitoring the vegetation resources in
riparian areas. Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-47. Ogden, UT: U.S.
Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain
Research Station. 49 p.
Wolman, M. G. 1954. A method of sampling coarse riverbed material.
Transactions of the American Geophysical Union. 35: 951–956.
Youngblood, A. P.; Padgett, W. G.; Winward, A. H. 1985. Riparian
community type classification of Eastern Idaho - Western Wyoming. R4-ECOL-85-01. Ogden, UT: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Intermountain Region. 78 p.
51
Appendix III-A (Equipment List) __________________________________
Gear everyone has (verify that you have it with √):
Hand lens
Ruler
Neck string
Plot string
Clicker
Compass
Probe
Tweezers
Clipboard
Microscope
Plant labels
Pencils
Plant press with cardboard and felt (you need to get newspaper)
Yellow flags
Flagging
Plastic zip-lock bags for specimens
Protocol
Notebook (pocket size)
Six-foot pole
Vests
Books (mark which you have with √):
Field Guide to the Willows of East Central Idaho (Brunsfeld and Johnson 1985)
Initial Riparian and Wetland Vegetation Classification and Characterization of the Columbia
Basin In Washington (Crawford 2001)
Mid-Montane Wetland Plant Associations of the Malheur, Umatilla and Wallowa-Whitman
National Forests (Crowe and Clausnitzer 1997)
The Willows of Montana (Dorn 1970)
Classification and Management of Montana's Riparian and Wetland Sites (Hansen and others
1996)
Plant Identification Terminology (Harris and Harris 1999)
Willows of Montana (Heinze 1992)
Flora of the Pacific Northwest (Hitchcock and Cronquist 1998)
Field Guide to Intermountain Sedges (Hurd and others 1998)
Field Guide to Intermountain Rushes (Hurd and others 1997)
Riparian Zone Associations -- Deschutes, Ochoco, Fremont, and Winema National Forests
(Kovalchik 1987)
Classification and Management of Aquatic, Riparian and Wetland Sites On the National Forests
of Eastern Washington (Part 1: the Series Descriptions) Final Draft (Kovalchik 2001)
Major Indicator Shrubs and Herbs In Riparian Zones On National Forests of Central Oregon
(Kovalchik and others 1988)
Riparian Community Type Classification For Humboldt and Toiyabe National Forests, Nevada
and Eastern California (Manning and Padgett 1995)
Riparian Community Type Classification of Utah and Southeastern Idaho (Padgett and others
1989)
Monitoring the Vegetation Resources In Riparian Areas (Winward 2000)
Riparian Community Type Classification of Eastern Idaho -- Western Wyoming (Youngblood and
others 1985)
Riparian Wetland Plant Associations of Southwestern Idaho (Jankovsky-Jones and others 2001)
52
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
Appendix III-B Forms 5–8 _______________________________________
Form 5
Green-Line Vegetation Data
Stream Name: __________________________
Data Collector: _______________________________
Reach ID #:
Steps per 110 m: _______________________________
__________________________
Riparian Vegetation Classification Used (circle):
Community Type
Kov-OR, Crowe, Kov-WA, Hansen, Padgett, Youngblood,
Manning, Crawford, other: ________________________
# of Steps on Right Bank
# of Steps on Left Bank
Total
Comments:
Greenline Options
:
• Record community type or new community only, no physical variables (note them in comments).
• For “new” communities write new1, new2, and so forth, and then use form “New Community Species Data.”
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
53
Form 6
Riparian Vegetation Cross-Sections & Effective Ground Cover
Stream Name: ______________________________
Data Collector: __________________________________
Reach ID #: ________________________________
Compass Bearing (face downstream): _______________
Cross-Sections (Xs)
Community type
XS 1
R
L
XS 1
total
XS 2
R
L
XS 2
total
XS 3
R
L
XS 3
total
XS 4
R
L
XS 4
total
XS 5
R
L
XS 5
total
Within 2x bankfull
Beyond 2x bankfull
Additional distance
> 27.5 m (use key)
xxxxx
xxxxx
xxxxx
xxxxx
xxxxx
0 = none, 1 = < distance stepped, 2 = 1x to 2x distance stepped, 3 = 2x to 4x distance stepped, 4 = > 4x distance stepped
Measured distance of
1 right cross-section: ____
____
____
____
____
Effective Ground Cover
Ground Cover
XS 1
R
L
XS 1
Total
XS 2
R
L
XS 2
Total
XS 3
R
L
XS 3
Total
XS 4
R
L
XS 4
Total
XS 5
R
L
XS 5
Total
Live vegetation
less than 1 m
Litter
Bare ground
Rock > 2.5 cm
Ponded water
54
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
Form 7
Woody Regeneration
Stream Name: __________________________
Data Collector: _________________________
Reach ID: ______________________________
Date: _________________________________
Woody Individuals Count
(all shrubs and trees rooted one meter within either side of greenline)
Species
Seedling/sprout
Young
Mature
< 1m
>1m
Decadent
Dead
Multi-stemmed species (shrubs)
Seedling/Sprout
= 1 Stem
Young
= 2 to10 Stems
Mature
= Greater than 10 Stems, greater than 1⁄2 alive
Decadent
= Greater than 10 Stems, less than 1⁄2 alive
Single stemmed species (tree-like)
Seedling/Sprout
less than 1⁄4 Mature Height, less than 0.3 meters tall
Young
less than 1⁄2 Mature Height, 0.3 to 2 meters tall
Mature
greater than 1⁄2 Mature Height, greater than 2 meters tall
greater than 1⁄2 Mature Height, and dead
Dead
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
55
Form 8
New Community Species Data
Date:
Data Collector:
Reach ID:
Stream:
Greenline or Cross Section (circle one)
New Community # (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, circle one)
Plot (a,b,c, and so forth):
Adjacent Community Types (2):
Size of new community (if only a few steps, lump with adjacent community types):
Herbaceous
Specimen collected
(grasses, forbs,
Cover yes or no (collect
Specimen
ID#
sedges, rushes)
Species
Class the most abundant)
Shrubs
Trees
Cover Classes:
56
1=0-5%,
2=5-25%,
3=25-50%,
4=0-75%,
5=75-95%,
6=95-100%
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
PLANT LABEL
Species ID in field: _________________________
Reach ID: ________________________________
Community type recorded as: ________________
% Cover: ________________________________
Associated species: ________________________
continued_________________________________
Habitat (circle): in water - streambank - meadow
- forest - riparian boundary - other___________
Collector: ________________________________
Photo #/s:________________________________
|
|
|
PLANT LABEL
Species ID in field: _________________________
Reach ID: ________________________________
Community type recorded as: ________________
% Cover: ________________________________
Associated species: ________________________
continued_________________________________
Habitat (circle): in water - streambank - meadow
- forest - riparian boundary - other____________
Collector: ________________________________
Photo #/s:_________________________________
|
|
|
PLANT LABEL
Species ID in field: _________________________
Reach ID: ________________________________
Community type recorded as: ________________
% Cover: ________________________________
Associated species: ________________________
continued_________________________________
Habitat (circle): in water - streambank - meadow
- forest - riparian boundary - other___________
Collector: _________________________________
Photo #/s:_________________________________
|
|
|
PLANT LABEL
Species ID in field: _________________________
Reach ID: ________________________________
Community type recorded as: ________________
% Cover: ________________________________
Associated tpecies: ________________________
continued_________________________________
Habitat (circle): in water - streambank - meadow
- forest - riparian boundary - other____________
Collector: _________________________________
Photo #/s:_________________________________
|
|
|
USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-121. 2004
57
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